Godolphin Looking Ahead to Summer Following Another ‘Pretty’ Big Weekend

It was a banner weekend for Godolphin homebreds during the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival.

Cody's Wish (Curlin) added another chapter to racing's feel-good story with a powerful, come-from-behind victory in the stallion-making GI Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan H.

The GI Kentucky Oaks winner and 'TDN Rising Star' Pretty Mischievous (Into Mischief) validated her upset neck victory on the first Friday in May with a heart-stopping victory in the GI Acorn S.

The up-and-coming Loved (Medaglia d'Oro)–a 4-year-old half-sister to MGISW and young Darley stallion Maxfield (Street Sense)–made it three straight runaway wins with a 12-length victory in an optional claimer in the Ellis slop on Sunday.

The 'Boys in Blue' also won last Friday's GII Belmont Gold Cup with Siskany (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) and finished third with both 425,000gns TATOCT buy Ottoman Fleet (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) (the lone auction purchase of the group) in Saturday's GI Manhattan S. and 'TDN Rising Star' Strobe (Into Mischief) in the GII True North S., respectively.

TDN's Senior Racing Editor Steve Sherack caught up with Godolphin USA Director of Bloodstock Michael Banahan earlier this week to discuss some of the highlights from last weekend as well as domestic summer plans for Sheikh Mohammed's high-powered global operation. Banahan also provided an update on 'TDN Rising Star' First Mission (Street Sense), who was a late scratch from last month's GI Preakness S.

Q: Cody's Wish seems like a good place to start. He made it six straight wins while matching his previous career high Beyer Speed Figure of 112 in the Met Mile. Bill Mott said a title defense in the seven-furlong GI Forego S. (at Saratoga Aug. 26) could be in the cards for Cody's Wish later this summer, but also left the door open for potentially stretching him out to 1 1/8 miles for the GI Whitney S. (at Saratoga Aug. 5). Has there been much dialogue yet regarding his summer campaign?

MB: It's certainly a good discussion point. It's just unfortunate that there's not really any race at his distance that suits at the moment. And it's a long time from the first week in June until the last weekend in August. So, we'll have to decide what's the best route for him. He's gone over a mile a couple of times unsuccessfully (finished third going 1 1/8 miles at Saratoga second out in 2021 and finished a close second in the GIII Challenger S. at Tampa last March), but there's probably reasons for that. We feel like he's a better racehorse now than he was 12 months ago. He's more professional and Junior Alvarado has gotten to know him and rides him very well.

We also have (2022 GI Clark S. winner and this year's GI Santa Anita H. runner-up and GII Oaklawn H. winner) Proxy (Tapit) that's gonna run in the (GI) Stephen Foster (S. at Ellis Park July 1), hopefully. Those races that are 1 1/8-miles plus suit him very well. We'll probably wait until after he runs in the Stephen Foster, then see where the cards lay.

But the Whitney or the Forego are the two obvious races for Cody's Wish. We'll just wait and see. It's a wonderful position to be in.

We saw what he did last weekend in the Met Mile and it was another step up for him. He just seems to be getting to a different level. It's hard to tell if they want to stay any further until you actually try them. They can gallop out well, but in all honestly, when you get to the winner line, that's the end of the race. It doesn't really count what you do afterwards.

Q: It's always great to see the Kentucky Oaks winner back up their form in the Acorn on Belmont Stakes weekend. Will Pretty Mischievous follow up in the GI Coaching Club American Oaks at Saratoga on July 22?

MB: We might go in a little bit of a different direction with her. She has a lot of pace as we've seen in the Oaks and in the Acorn. She travels extremely well. We are very tempted to back her up a little bit and go in the (GI) Test (S. going seven furlongs at Saratoga Aug. 5) instead. We think that's a race that she has enough pace for and it might suit her even better. We'll have a good strong look at that. Nothing written in stone. We also have the Oaks favorite Wet Paint (Blame) drawn in this weekend in the Monomoy Girl S. at Ellis Park. We feel that the Coaching Club Oaks–depending how she gets on this weekend–might come into play for her.

Q: What's the excitement level like having a Kentucky Oaks winner and another sophomore filly of such a high caliber–and both homebreds–carry the Godolphin blue?

MB: We've always liked Pretty Mischievous. We never felt that she ever let us down, but she probably is only getting the respect that she deserves now. And maybe that's a little bit to do with her racing style where she sort of waits on horses a little bit and ends up being in tight finishes. We've always been very high on her and going into the Kentucky Oaks–I said it at the time–that I couldn't really separate the two fillies. And I still think that they're very equal talent wise.

I don't think we saw the best of Wet Paint that day (in the Oaks). Flavien Prat came back and said that she didn't really take to the Churchill surface as well as she did to Oaklawn. I might be a little bit biased, but the record is out there for everyone else to see that we maybe have the two best 3-year-old fillies in the country. We're very excited to see what the balance of the year will hold for them. We'll try to keep them separated from each other for the near future.

Q: She's missed a lot of time, but Maxfield's half-sister Loved continues to make up for it. She was super impressive once again winning over the weekend at Ellis Park, her third straight victory since sitting on the shelf for more than a year. The patient approach by Brendan Walsh certainly looks like it's all paying off now. Is there a stakes race with her name on it next out?

MB: We've been waiting on her a long time. Brendan had to be very patient with her. We were hoping to get her running down in Florida in the winter time and different things conspired where we didn't get a start in her. She's developed mentally and physically since. She was one filly that we were very much looking forward to getting back to the racetrack and seeing what she could do and she hasn't let us down. She's taking those nice building-block races and getting a little bit more experience every time. She looks like she's very talented. We'll take it slowly, but we're probably looking at the GIII Molly Pitcher on Haskell day (July 22) at Monmouth for her. She deserves to get into a graded race now and see where we are. If she stays healthy and well, we'll have some nice days down the road with her.

Q: First Mission's GIII Stonestreet Lexington S. form was further flattered over the weekend when both Arabian Lion (Justify) (GI Woody Stephens S.) and Disarm (Gun Runner) (GIII Matt Winn S.) won impressively. Obviously a crushing blow to have to scratch him out of the Preakness last month. What's the latest on him?

MB: We're just giving him a little bit of time off. We'll regroup next month and see where we stand. Get him reevaluated and try and get him back on track again. No need to rehash our Preakness disappointment. But it was a pretty crushing one. We thought we had maybe the best horse in the race. But, anyway, we saw what Arabian Lion did in the Woody Stephens and we felt like we beat him pretty readily in the Lexington.

Look, First Mission is a very talented horse. We just look forward now rather than backwards and hopefully in the fall and next year we're gonna have an exceptionally nice horse for some big days down the road.

Q: What was the diagnosis? Was it an issue with his left hind leg that led to the time off?

MB: Not really, it was a little bit of bone bruising. Nothing major, relatively insignificant. We'll just give him that little bit of time (60 days off). He seems like he's doing OK and enjoying his time off. We're looking forward to getting him back going again.

Q: Glancing over her worktab, it looks like Matareya (Pioneerof the Nile) has bounced out of her win in the GI Derby City Distaff S. on Kentucky Derby day in good form. What kind of targets does she have lined up for the summer and fall?

MB: It's a funny program. We had the Distaff set up nicely in the spring and then there's not any races at the Grade I level–the Breeders' Cup champion (Goodnight Olive) is having a run this weekend in a Grade II in New York (in the GII Bed O' Roses S.).

Matareya, we wanted to keep her at home. We're gonna run her in the (GIII) Chicago (S. at Ellis Park June 24). She obviously likes Churchill Downs and we were expecting to be running at Churchill Downs. But she'll take a day trip down to Ellis and hopefully lead us to the (GI) Ballerina (H. at Saratoga Aug. 26). She's doing well. We're very happy with her. She improved from her first race of the year at Oaklawn (second in Matron S.), which we were hoping would happen. There's some really nice sprinting fillies out there and she's at the top end of the table with them. We were delighted with her win at Churchill. She's tactically very astute and has that speed to put herself in a good position to win those type of races. Looking forward to a big second half of the year with her.

Q: Final question. Three Grade I victories over Kentucky Derby weekend, led by a win in the Kentucky Oaks, and another two during the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival, including the prestigious Met Mile. What does this level of success on racing's biggest stages–all with homebreds–mean for the operation?

MB: It's what we get out of bed every morning for. It's all the hard work over the previous years that lead up to that to try and develop these horses and get a broodmare band established that we feel like we have an opportunity to do so. It takes plenty of luck to get there as well. We had a massive Derby weekend and to back it up with Pretty Mischievous winning the Acorn and Cody's Wish winning the Met Mile–we were especially delighted to be able to provide the assist for Bill Mott to get his first Met Mile win.

They're the weekends you look forward to all year long and want to be winning on. We realize that we've been fortunate and on a great run here lately. It means everything to all of our people that work on the farms in Kentucky and also to Godolphin globally as well. We had people over from Europe and for them to see what we're achieving over here in America first hand was great. And back in Dubai for Godolphin's founder Sheikh Mohammed, who takes a great interest in how we're doing in America as well. I think he got a big kick out of seeing those horses perform at that level. We all have a great pep in our step on Monday morning after those big weekends.

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Born for the Task: Five Pedigree Takeaways From Belmont Weekend

With a new cycle of yearling sales nearly upon us, nearly everyone will once again be deciding where they are most prepared to compromise. Would you prefer an athlete low on pedigree, or will you trust the genes to come through even if you're not wowed by the specimen in front of you?

Well, there's no mistaking which strategy is recommended by the story of the GI Belmont S. winner. Though from one of America's most aristocratic families, Arcangelo (Arrogate) lurked in the September Sale as Hip 1182 and was picked out of the Gainesway consignment by Jon Ebbert of Blue Rose Farm for just $35,000.

Apparently the colt had several of those familiar issues liable to keep a horse off shortlists. He was on the small side, immature. There was that ever-divisive quibble, a touch of sesamoiditis. He was a ridgling. And of course his sire had deceased, which the market tends to view as a discourtesy surpassed only by export to Turkey or Peru. Worse yet, Arrogate had only notched his first winner the week before the sale. The unraced dam, meanwhile, had made a poor start to her breeding career.

The pinhookers were out of the game, then, but Ebbert saw that a little patience might yet draw out genetic potential way in advance of the colt's cost. After all, Don Alberto Corporation had given as much as $2.85 million for his dam Modeling (Tapit), whose own racing career had been written off so early that her previous owners had her covered as a 2-year-old.

That's not to everyone's taste, it has to be said, and nor did the Distorted Humor colt she was carrying (result of that maiden cover) when acquired by Don Alberto at the 2014 Keeneland November Sale contribute a great deal as the only starter listed on her fifth foal's catalogue page. (He did win a maiden, but ended up beaten under a $12,500 tag at Belterra.)

But the rest of that page was simply spectacular. Modeling's dam was a Storm Cat half-sister to consecutive Belmont winners, Jazil (Seeking The Gold) and Rags To Riches (A.P. Indy), out of the broodmare legend Better Than Honour (Deputy Minister). And don't forget that the Japanese-trained Casino Drive (Mineshaft) might well have made it three in a row, judged on his impressive reconnaissance in the GII Peter Pan S., but for the injury that kept him out of “Big Brown's” Belmont.

Arcangelo, given due time by Ebbert and trainer Jena Antonucci, came to notice in that same race-and very aptly so. The Peter Pan, positioned between the first two legs of the Triple Crown as a latecomers' springboard to the third, is named for the champion sophomore of 1907. He missed the Derby and Preakness before winning the Belmont, and Arcangelo's revelatory performance last Saturday makes it quite feasible to aspire to the same laurels himself. His lamented sire, after all, was himself a late developer who picked up the pieces of the Triple Crown horses in the GI Travers S. Indeed, Arrogate only broke his maiden the week before the Belmont.

Those to have previously set up their Belmont wins in the Peter Pan include A.P. Indy, whose grandson Tapit this time enhanced his astonishing impact on the most grueling test of an American Thoroughbred in the guise of a broodmare sire. Besides the two starters sired by Tapit himself, Arcangelo was among four of the remaining seven to have been delivered by one of his daughters.
With Tapit as damsire and Better Than Honour as third dam, then, Arcangelo was born for the Belmont. And both sides of his pedigree virtually guarantee continued progress from here.

The dynasty spreading beneath Better Than Honour's granddam Best In Show (Traffic Judge) is too large and familiar to be condensed here, but it's worth reminding ourselves that it features a young stallion very closely related to Arcangelo's dam. By Tapit out of Modeling's half-sister by Street Cry, and far more talented than his final record suggests, Greatest Honour will surely have been in strong demand at just $7,500 during his debut season at Spendthrift.

Arrogate, meanwhile, is now launching his final juveniles. Having now produced Classic winners from both his first two crops, he has clearly demonstrated a genetic legacy worth preserving from his tragically confined opportunity. Cave Rock has disappeared from the radar for now but would have commercial mileage at stud, as a dual Grade I winner at two. But Arrogate's legacy might yet prove no less secure with a son who was not only among his cheapest yearlings, but among the very best-bred.

Curlin Cuts a Dash

Cody's Wish | Sarah K. Andrew

Another daughter of Tapit to be celebrated in New York on Saturday was Dance Card, dam of the brilliant GI Met Mile winner Cody's Wish (Curlin). She was a pretty fast horse by the standards of a stallion who has so dominated the Belmont Stakes, having started out as a $750,000 2-year-old and finished with a length defeat in the GI Filly & Mare Sprint at the Breeders' Cup. Her own mother was by a Belmont winner, however, and on paper it might seem baffling that his seasoned connections should be so hesitant to stretch out a son of Curlin with first two dams by Tapit and Editor's Note. Apparently a ninth furlong in the GI Whitney will at least be discussed, but speed is plainly considered his forte-just as it is, still more obviously, in another son of Curlin resident in the same barn.

Elite Power, too, extended his winning streak in the GII True North S. on Saturday, replicating their double score at the Breeders' Cup last fall. On that occasion, the Curlin procession also featured Malathaat in the GI Distaff, and this time her role was filled by Clairiere in the GI Ogden Phipps S. Another famous day, then, for a stallion who reiterates the most wholesome of hallmarks in the robust consistency of Cody's Wish and Elite Power, now on a roll of six and seven wins respectively. But this pair, while typically thriving with maturity, can also make us stop and think afresh about the Hill 'n' Dale patriarch, even at 19.

Elite Power's dam Broadway's Alibi represents a different line of Seattle Slew from the one that gave us Dance Card, as she is by his son Vindication. Again, on paper, you might expect a son of Curlin out of GI Kentucky Oaks runner-up by Vindication (albeit Broadway's Alibi also won the GII Forward Gal over 7f) to relish a second turn-much as Exaggerator did, as a son of Curlin out of a stakes-placed sprinter by Vindication. Okay, so it's a sharp family in behind: the dam of Broadway's Alibi was an Astoria S.-winning half-sister by Seeking The Gold to Dialed In (Mineshaft), out of a daughter of juvenile champion filly Eliza (Mt. Livermore). Nonetheless it does feel striking that Bill Mott is talking about his two Curlin dashers respectively stepping up and down in trip to meet over seven furlongs in the GI Forego S.

It just goes to show how different strands of pedigree come through in different horses. If you identified Stallion X as having Mr. Prospector as a grandsire and Deputy Minister as damsire, you'd be perfectly comfortable with the idea that he could pass on a ton of speed. The intrusion of Smart Strike, whose diverse portfolio included several that matched Curlin in thriving round two turns with maturity, has set a tone for much of Curlin's best stock. But that won't stop other flavors filtering through.

And if you'll permit an Englishman the observation, it doesn't help us that so much American blood tends to have been tested over such a narrow span of distance. How many of the names in Curlin's third and fourth generations, all indigenous and largely operating in a standard window, might have been at the limit of their fuel? Is the forgotten sire of Curlin's third dam, Wise Exchange, smuggling through more speed or stamina?

In broader terms, Curlin's dashers remind us that horses are made of flesh and blood, not software data. That being so, we should surely breed for balance and depth of quality, rather than seek some alchemy between a couple of coarsely interpreted sire brands (Curlin x Tapit; Curlin x Vindication). That way, it won't really matter which genetic ingredients end up coming through-it'll all be good stuff.

Lion Runs Up the Ensign for Justify

Arabian LIon | Sarah K. Andrew

It was his unusual precocity, by the standards of Curlin, that always set Good Magic apart. Happily, his stock is also emulating his own consolidation at three, and a Derby winner and a Preakness runner-up have helped him carry forward the fight after he narrowly lost out to Bolt d'Oro in that remarkable contest for the freshman title last year.

It's important for the other protagonists to hang in there, then, and Arabian Lion duly has the look of a very important horse for his sire.
Justify's breakout Grade I scorer in the Woody Stephens S. continues an exciting June for Arabian Lion's breeders at Bonne Chance Farm, who watched in amazement as another farm graduate, King Of Steel (Wootton Bassett {GB}), broke clear of the pack in the Epsom Derby on his first start in 224 days, only run down late by the winner.

Arabian Lion amply repaid Justify's opening $150,000 fee as a $600,000 OBS April purchase, by Zedan Racing from Hidden Brook. In turn, he brings a pedigree that would make that look a bargain, too, if he can keep progressing to a place at stud. His third dam is none other than Personal Ensign, who founded a dynasty commensurate with her elite racetrack status-starting with three Grade I winners among her own foals (plus a fourth beaten a nose in the Carter H.).

As it happens, Arabian Lion is out of a full-sister to the dam of Major Dude, whose recent GII Penn Mile success topped up his status as leading contributor to the coffers of Bolt d'Oro this term.

Bolt d'Oro has so far had four stakes winners this year (101 starters, earnings to date of $3.1 million), one more than Good Magic (who is certainly making his punches land where they count most, with 83 starters banking $4.8 million) and two more than Justify (85 starters, $2.1 million). As last year, however, we again need to congratulate Army Mule, who has also had four stakes winners and tipped $2 million from just 61 starters (just cents behind Mendelssohn, from as many as 110 starters).

Veterans Strike Gold

Gold Sweep | Sarah K. Andrew

Some people were doubtless a little irritated by my choice of a 25-year-old stallion standing at $80,000 for gold on our “value podium” among proven sires last winter; and no doubt those supervising the evening of his career at WinStar will have managed his book with all due sensitivity to his age. But Speightstown appears to have produced yet another brilliant talent in Gold Sweep, nine-length winner of the Tremont S. at Belmont on Sunday.

Bred in Kentucky by Joe Anzalone, Gold Sweep will get some iron out of his dam, who's by Giant's Causeway out of Canadian champion Ginger Brew (Milwaukee Brew). That makes him inbred 3 x 3 to Storm Cat, who gave us Speightstown's dam Silken Doll as well as Giant's Causeway.

Having learned plenty when missing by a neck on debut at Churchill, Gold Sweep looked worth every cent of the $285,000 he cost Mike McCarty from Indian Creek at Saratoga last summer. He smashed the time for the equivalent filly stakes earlier on the card, by over three seconds, and duly wears a 90 Beyer on his chest going into his next battle.

The disappointment of the race was Vitement, who bombed out after his debut success had promised to reward his breeders for their perseverance in using Speightstown's admirable contemporary, Mizzen Mast. The Juddmonte stalwart was pensioned after producing a single live foal from a few covers in 2021, leaving Vitement as one of 11 current juveniles with the chance to draw out the priceless genes of a son of Cozzene out of a Graustark mare.

With that compression to past glories in mind-the sire of Mizzen Mast's fourth dam was born before the First World War!-you could argue that Caravel was well bought at $500,000 at Fasig-Tipton in November 2021, simply as a breeding prospect. She was already a graded stakes winner, back then, but now she has supplemented her Breeders' Cup success last autumn with the GI Jaipur S.
Mizzen Mast has duly reserved some of his very best material for late in the piece, and maybe Speightstown, having lately given us Charlatan and Olympiad, is going to keep doing the same with Gold Sweep.

Extra Interest for the Winchells

Pretty Mischievous | Sarah K. Andrew

A good weekend for Tapit mares (and Godolphin homebreds) was kicked off by Pretty Mischievous, albeit only just, in the GI Acorn S. on Friday. That helped Into Mischief to a new landmark of $150 million in earnings, and also keeps him on track for another successful defense of his crown as champion stallion.

Away from Belmont, moreover, the Spendthrift phenomenon also showcased a rising force among the sophomores when Extra Anejo blew away his allowance rivals at Ellis Park on Saturday. This colt cost Winchell Thoroughbreds $1.35 million from Mt. Brilliant Farm (co-breeder with Orrin H. Ingram) at Keeneland in September 2021, and you could see why in his spectacular debut at the adjacent racetrack last fall. Unfortunately he was then sidelined by a minor injury, and while he did run at Churchill on the first Saturday in May, it was only in an optional allowance. He ran well there, just unable to reel in a sprinter, but this was something else again and he looks ready to make up for lost time.

Like Good Magic, Extra Anejo is out of a Hard Spun mare-and what an interesting mare she is. Superioritycomplex (Ire) brought 400,000gns from the ever astute Marette Farrell, on behalf of Mt. Brilliant, at the dispersal of the storied Ballymacoll Stud at Tattersalls in 2017. She had just finished a light career with a maiden win, but she was out of an unraced daughter of Galileo (Ire) and the Ballymacoll matriarch Hellenic (Ire) (Darshaan {GB}), dam of three Group 1 winners. So sending her to Into Mischief really was an attempt to combine the best of both worlds.

The second half of the campaign is looking pretty exciting for the Winchell family and their team, then, with their Derby fourth Disarm taking another step forward in a strong race for the GIII Matt Winn at Ellis Park on Sunday. Inevitably, given his breeders, that colt is by Gun Runner out of-you guessed it-a Tapit mare.

With nine graded stakes winners out of his daughters already this year, the Gainesway patriarch approaches serial new landmarks (he stands on 999 winners, 99 in graded stakes, for earnings of $198 million) from another fresh summit: the top of the broodmare sires' table.

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Kentucky Oaks Heroine Pretty Mischievous Delivers in Acorn Thriller

ELMONT, NY — Godolphin homebred and 'TDN Rising Star' Pretty Mischievous (Into Mischief) followed up her thrilling GI Kentucky Oaks victory with a hard-fought, head decision over Dorth Vader (Girvin) in Friday's GI Acorn S. at Belmont Park. Occult (Into Mischief) was another four lengths back in third.

Cutting back to a one-turn 1 1/16 miles here, the 9-5 second-choice raced within striking distance in an outside fifth as the stretching-out and favored 'Rising Star' Munnys Gold (Munnings) led through fractions of :23.34 and :46.37. Pretty Mischievous loomed boldly while three wide approaching the quarter pole and looked well on her way after hitting the front in the stretch. Dorth Vader, making her first start for George Weaver after finishing fifth in the Kentucky Oaks, made her work for it, however, and battled back gamely along the inside down the stretch. Pretty Mischievous showed her class in the end to win her second straight and joins fellow recent Kentucky Oaks winners Bird Town (Cape Town) (2013), Abel Tasman (Quality Road) (2017) and Monomoy Girl (Tapizar) (2018) to double up in the Acorn.

Sheikh Mohammed's operation also won this race last year with Matareya (Pioneerof the Nile).

“What's funny is that in the blink of an eyelid, when Todd's [Pletcher] filly [Munnys Gold] kind of backed up, she was in front [and] I was worried because she will idle a little bit, like she did in the [Kentucky] Oaks and she did it again today,” winning trainer Brendan Walsh said. “She's just a great filly. It's unbelievable and such an honor to have her for the people we have her [for]. I think she'll get better and better as the year goes on. She's still got a bit of furnishing to do. We still have a little ways to go.”

Pretty Mischievous, a winner of her first two starts sprinting at Churchill Downs last fall, suffered her first career defeat finishing third in the GII Golden Rod S. beneath the Twin Spires Nov. 26. The bay enjoyed a fantastic winter at the Fair Grounds, annexing her first two career stakes victories in the Untapable S. Dec. 26 and the GII Rachel Alexandra S. Feb. 18. She looked primed for a third straight win in the GII Fair Grounds Oaks, but, after hitting the front in the stretch, reported home a well-beaten second. She was making her first start with blinkers for Walsh on the first Friday in May.

Winning jockey Tyler Gaffalione added, “I'm just so proud of her. She's really developed into an amazing filly. She seems to just be getting bigger and stronger with each race. I can't wait for the day she finishes out one of her races. She gets to the lead and she kind of waits. She just has so much talent. I don't think we've seen the best of her yet.”

He continued, “I think the blinkers have really helped her because before when we made the lead, she would just go to a complete stop. At least now you're getting a little bit more out of her.”

Pedigree Notes:

Pretty Mischievous is one of 130 black-type winners bred in the Northern Hemisphere by Into Mischief, who also has 64 graded winners, 17 at the top level. The super sire cross of Into Mischief over Tapit is also responsible for GSW Hoosier Philly, a recent second in the GII Black-Eyed Susan S., and GSW Rocket Can, ninth in the GI Kentucky Derby. Pretty Mischievous is the second foal out of 2016 GI Spinaway S. winner Pretty City Dancer, who is a half-sister to GI Gazelle S. winner Lear's Princess (Lear Fan). Stroud Coleman Bloodstock acquired Pretty City Dancer on behalf of Godolphin for $3.5 million at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton November Sale while she was carrying her first foal, now the winning 4-year-old Medaglia d'Oro filly named Ornamental. The mare was barren to Uncle Mo for 2021, but has a Medaglia d'Oro yearling filly and a Street Sense filly born Mar. 28.

Friday, Belmont Park
ACORN S. PRESENTED BY GREAT JONES DISTILLING CO.-GI, $500,000, Belmont, 6-9, 3yo, f, 1 1/16m, 1:43.33, ft.
1–PRETTY MISCHIEVOUS, 123, f, 3, by Into Mischief
                1st Dam: Pretty City Dancer (GISW, $286,344), by Tapit
                2nd Dam: Pretty City, by Carson City
                3rd Dam: Pretty Special, by Riverman
'TDN Rising Star'. O/B-Godolphin (KY); T-Brendan P. Walsh;
J-Tyler Gaffalione. $275,000. Lifetime Record: 8-6-1-1,
$1,481,560. Werk Nick Rating: A+++. *Triple Plus*
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Dorth Vader, 120, f, 3, by Girvin
1st Dam: Hardcore Candy (SP, $101,308), by Yonaguska
2nd Dam: Its a Girl, by Thunder Gulch
3rd Dam: Ladyago, by Northern Dancer
1ST G1 BLACK TYPE. O-John Ropes; B-John Ropes (FL);
T-George Weaver. $100,000.
3–Occult, 118, f, 3, by Into Mischief
1st Dam: Magical Feeling (GSW & GISP, $554,532), by Empire Maker
2nd Dam: Magical Mood (GB), by Forestry
3rd Dam: Good Mood, by Devil's Bag
1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE, 1ST G1 BLACK TYPE. ($625,000 Ylg
'21 KEESEP). O-Alpha Delta Stables, LLC; B-Peter E. Blum
Thoroughbreds, LLC (KY); T-Chad C. Brown. $60,000.
Margins: HD, 4, HF. Odds: 1.90, 11.30, 27.50.
Also Ran: Munnys Gold, Accede, Randomized, Frosty O Toole, Goodgirl Badhabits.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Pretty Mischievous Drills Towards Acorn

'TDN Rising Star' Pretty Mischievous (Into Mischief), last-start winner of the GI Longines Kentucky Oaks May 5, breezed a half-mile in :47.87 over the Belmont main track at 6:45 Saturday morning in advance of a start in Friday's GI Acorn S. at Belmont Park. The Godolphin homebred worked in the company of the dual graded-stakes placed Gilmore (Twirling Candy), who is expected for Saturday's GI Woody Stephens S. on the Belmont S. undercard.

Trainer Brendan Walsh was duly pleased with his filly's final serious piece of work.

“That's typical of her,” Walsh commented. “I think she even went :47 4/5 in her work before the Oaks as well. She's been doing well since then. Everything seems spot on for her.”

The Acorn will be contested over a one-turn 8 1/2 furlongs for the first time this year, having been lengthened from a mile, and Walsh is not concerned about the cutback to one bend.

“I don't think it'll be a problem at all,” Walsh said. “It should work out well for her. She has plenty of natural speed, which is required in this type of race.”

Gilmore was runner-up in the GIII Bay Shore S. at Aqueduct Apr. 8 and cuts back to a sprint off a sound third in the GII Pat Day Mile at Churchill May 6.

“I thought he worked great, too. That was a great work for him,” Walsh said. “He's not the most generous worker in the morning, but he worked fine. I didn't want him to go head-to-head with her because I thought they would have gone too fast.”

 

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