2022 Claiming Horse Of The Year Invaluable Ready To ‘Turn The Tables’ On Last-Out Winner Samarita

Invaluable secured the National HBPA's Claiming Horse of the Year when she captured the Claiming Crown Glass Slipper last year at Churchill Downs in the mud for trainer Mike Maker and owner Paradise Farms Corp. The 6-year-old mare will attempt to defend that victory in Saturday's $100,000 race for fillies and mares that have competed for a claiming price of $12,500 or less in 2022 or 2023. But this go-round it will be with a new trainer (Joe Sharp) and owners (Forgotten Man Racing and Dominic Damiano) and at the Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots in New Orleans.

Sharp and the owners claimed Invaluable two races ago, the day she won a $25,000 claiming race by a nose. They've run her back once, in a $10,000 starter-allowance race at Keeneland. Invaluable closed to finish second, but was never a threat in a 12 3/4-length victory by Illinois shipper Samarita. The two will face off again in the Glass Slipper (race 4, post time 2:15 p.m. CT), which at the Fair Grounds is a mile around two turns vs. Churchill Downs' one-turn mile last year.

While calling Samarita “definitely a really nice filly,” Sharp is extremely confident for a trainer whose horse just lost by 12 3/4 lengths.

“Obviously she showed last year she can handle the off track, if it's the weather they're calling for,” he said of Invaluable. “She's been a nice filly. We claimed her at Churchill, ran back at Keeneland and she came out of that with a little bit of a sinus deal going on. So it probably wasn't her best effort. But she's doing fantastic, really has transitioned well down here. She had a nice breeze about 10 days out from her race. I think we can turn the tables on the filly that beat her.

“Post race unveiled that we weren't 100 percent that day. So we've got a built-in excuse and we're going to use it. I feel very confident going into this race, and she's doing fantastic.”

Of being the reigning Claiming Horse of the year, Sharp said, “I know! Those are big shoes to fill. We've got to keep her crown.”

Sharp also is well-positioned in the $200,000 Claiming Crown Jewel (race 10, 5:15 p.m. CT) at 1 1/8 miles with 5-2 favorite Money Supply, a $400,000 yearling purchase claimed by Sharp and owner Jordan Wycoff for $35,000 at Saratoga. In three races for Money Supply's new team, the 4-year-old Practical Joke colt was a close second in a $50,000 starter-allowance, then won a similar race at Churchill Downs and followed with victory in a first-level allowance race.

Dana's Beauty will make her first start for Sharp in the $150,000 Claiming Crown Tiara (race 5, 2:45 p.m. CDT) at 1 1/16 miles on turf for fillies and mares that have raced for a claiming price of $25,000 or less in 2022 or 2023. Dana's Beauty is 8-1 in a field of nine, with the 3-1 favorite Perhaps Tonight making her first start for trainer Tom Amoss.

The 5-year-old Dana's Beauty, who had been racing over Presque Isle's all-weather surface, was claimed for $25,000 two starts back to become Claiming Crown-eligible, then finished a very close third in a stakes. She's owned by the Magic Oaks Stable of the brother and sister team of horse owner and trainer Adam Rice and Taylor Ortiz, who is married to jockey Jose Ortiz.

“Taylor worked for me this summer (at Saratoga), so it's kind of fun,” Sharp said. “The filly has been down here at the Fair Grounds, had about a month to settle in and has had three good works over the track. She just seems like an improving filly. I don't know what would happen if it would come off the turf, but her work in the slop was really good.

“We have a lot of confidence. If it's on the grass, we like her a lot. She's been working phenomenal.”

Sharp also has Bizzee Channel and Runway Magic in the $150,000 Emerald at 1 1/16 miles on turf (race 9, 4:45 p.m. CT). Magic Castle is entered in the $75,000 Ready's Rocket Express but could be scratched because of difficulties in getting the horse shipped from Remington Park in Oklahoma.

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Claiming Crown: With Rain In Forecast, ‘Looks Like It’s All Coming Together’ For Time For Trouble

When Paul Parker and trainer and co-owner Jeff Hiles claimed Time for Trouble for $8,000 some 2 1/2 years ago, they did not have huge expectations beyond getting a horse worth his price tag.

Hiles: “We thought we were getting an $8,000 horse that we might be able to improve a little bit with.”

Parker: “We were just trying to win some starter races over at Belterra going a mile and a half on turf.”

Since then, Time for Trouble – the only horse Parker currently has in training — has won six races and, by Hiles' calculation, $330,000 in purses. That includes a $166,000 allowance race on turf last year at Kentucky Downs and a $120,000 second-level allowance race on dirt at Keeneland this spring. (He also won his first start for his new barn at Belterra, setting a course record in an $8,000 starter-race at 1 3/8 miles on grass.)

Saturday, the 6-year-old gelding will attempt to repeat last year's victory in the $75,000 Claiming Crown Iron Horse Kent Stirling Memorial (race 6, post time 3:15 p.m. CT), this time at the Fair Grounds after being held last year at Churchill Downs. Hiles is going for a personal three-peat in the race, having won in 2021 with Blue Steel at Gulfstream Park for his first Claiming Crown victory.

Also seeking a repeat in the Claiming is National HBPA Claiming Horse of the Year Invaluable, who returns in Glass Slipper, albeit with a new trainer in Joe Sharp.

The Claiming Crown, conceived to be a Breeders' Cup-style event for claiming horses, was created in 1999 by the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) and the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (TOBA). The program gives thoroughbred racing's workhorses, their owners and trainers a day in the spotlight in recognition of their importance to filling out race cards across the nation. This year's 25th Claiming Crown is being staged with support from the host track and the Louisiana HBPA.

The Claiming Crown races are conducted under starter-allowance conditions, meaning they are restricted to horses that have competed at least once for a certain claiming level or cheaper during a designated time frame.

June 18, 2021 was the only time that Time for Trouble ran in a claiming race as cheap as $8,000, and he finished fourth. But that race gave him lifetime eligibility for the Ready's Rocket Express, for horses that have raced for a claiming price of $8,000 or less at any time in their career.

“You've got to get lucky,” Hiles said. “We won a 13-way shake the day we got him. So we got really, really lucky. We thought he could run a lot longer and on the grass. At $4,000 apiece, if you lose out on it, you're not losing a whole lot. And there seemed a lot of upside.”

Time for Trouble had raced well on turf and dirt, fast or sloppy tracks, and at distances from 1 1/16 to 1 3/4 miles.

“I think he's better on dirt than he is on turf is the weird thing,” Parker said, referencing Time for Trouble's pedigree, being a son of turf champion English Channel out of a Galileo mare. “He runs on anything. I think he gets that from the Galileo.”

Hiles believes Time for Trouble is better this year than going into last year's Claiming Crown, when he prevailed by 3 1/4 lengths in the slop. James Graham picks up the mount on the tepid 7-2 favorite in the field of 12.

“He should be the favorite,” Hiles said. “He won a 'two other than' at Keeneland this spring. He finished second in a stakes race at Saratoga. But he's not a heavy favorite. Those Claiming Crown races are tough.”

Time for Trouble flew to California for the Grade 2, $250,000 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Stakes at 1 5/8 miles on dirt on the Breeders' Cup undercard. But the gelding wound up scraping a back leg in the stall and had to be scratched so they could treat the wound.

The Claiming Crown is Plan B, Hiles acknowledged.

“It probably should have been Plan A,” he said. “We wanted to run in that race in California, and unfortunately he got scratched. This is our next option.”

Parker owns the 1950's style diner Parker's Drive-In in Paducah, Ky. Racing as Thorndale Stable, he tends to be a one-horse operation at the track. Parker had the filly Wicked Wish that he raced and then bred. She produced Rated R Superstar, with whom Parker won multiple graded stakes before losing him as a 5-year-old for $62,500. Rated R Superstar wound up earning more than a million for other owners.

“My kids are all over me about being the dumbest guy in the world,” Parker said. “I said, 'I can play this game.' That's when I claimed Trouble. That's the only horse I ever claimed. And we weren't the only guys trying to claim him.”

You could say Parker is looking for Trouble Saturday.

“I love the Claiming Crown,” he said. “The longest stretch in the country and it's looking like rain. It looks like it's all coming together for Trouble.”

But Parker won't be there, saying: “I've never been to a race he's won. I hate it, but it's not going to hurt his feelings if I don't show up. I'll take one for the team.”

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‘Nice And Fresh’ Dr B Vies For Back-To-Back Wins In Go For Wand

Cash is King and LC Racing's Dr B will vie to successfully defend her title in Saturday's Grade 3, $200,000 Go for Wand, a one-mile main track test for fillies and mares 3-years-old and up, at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The Go for Wand, carded as Race 8, is one of four graded stakes slated for Saturday's stacked Cigar Mile Day card, which features the Grade 2, $500,000 Cigar Mile Handicap presented by NYRA Bets in Race 10, and a pair of nine-furlong Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks qualifiers for juveniles that award 10-5-3-2-1 points to the top-five finishers in the Grade 2, $250,000 Remsen in Race 9 and the Grade 2, $250,000 Demoiselle for fillies in Race 7. First post for the 10-race card is 11:50 a.m. Eastern.

Trained by Butch Reid, Jr., Dr B scored her first graded victory in last year's Go for Wand in wire-to-wire fashion, drawing off strongly down the stretch to cross the finish line 4 1/4 lengths ahead of post-time favorite Bank Sting in a final time of 1:35.18. The win, which garnered a career-best 103 Beyer Speed Figure, followed a pair of runner-up efforts in Parx Racing's Roamin Rachel and the Pumpkin Pie at Belmont at the Big A, the latter of which she lost by just three-quarter lengths in her first start over the Aqueduct main track.

This year, the 5-year-old daughter of Liam's Map enters from a fourth in the Parx Dirt Mile when taking on males over sloppy and sealed going on September 23 at Parx. That effort came after making four starts at the graded level this year, including a good runner-up effort to Caramel Swirl in the Grade 3 Vagrancy when making her seasonal debut in May at Belmont Park, and a second-place finish behind 2021 Champion 2-Year-Old Filly Echo Zulu in the Grade 2 Honorable Miss Handicap in July at Saratoga Race Course. She boasts a lifetime record of 21-5-7-2 with total purse earnings of $473,240.

Reid, Jr. said he looks forward to Dr B returning to the Big A.

“It's a funny course and she seems to enjoy it,” said Reid, Jr. “We're going to give her the opportunity. We expect her to show good speed in there and she should be nice and fresh.”

Jose Lezcano has the call from post 2.

Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown will send out Klaravich Stables' Grade 2-winner Gerrymander [post 6, Jose Ortiz] as she rounds back into form off a facile score in an off-the-turf running of the Noble Damsel on October 8 when facing a match race against Sunset Louise. The daughter of Into Mischief made easy work of her lone foe and drew clear in the stretch to win by 25 lengths.

The consistent bay was Grade 1-placed as a juvenile when second in the Frizette at Belmont, and went on the win the Grade 2 Mother Goose last year with a three-length score over Big Sandy that garnered a career-best 98 Beyer. This year, she finished a pacesetting third in the Grade 2 Ruffian in May at Belmont ahead of three close on-the-board finishes in optional claiming company.

Gerrymander, a $375,000 purchase at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, breezed a half-mile in 49.77 seconds on Sunday over the Belmont Park training track.

“She breezed quite well, and I think this will be the right distance for her,” said Brown. “The one-turn mile suits her. She's coming back into form, so she looks good.”

Brown will also saddle Peter Brant's Good Sam [post 7, Irad Ortiz, Jr.], who has made three starts this year after a seven-month layoff that followed a successful stakes debut in last year's one-mile Tempted here.

The daughter of Good Samaritan finished second against elders in second-level optional claiming company in her first two starts of her sophomore campaign, bested in June at Belmont by graded stakes-winner Midnight Stroll and in July at Saratoga by multiple graded stakes-placed Sterling Silver. She broke through at the same level last out on October 4 when pouncing from off the pace to win by 3 1/2 lengths sprinting seven furlongs.

“It was very important for her to win last out and I was quite pleased with her race,” said Brown. “She took a little while to come around this year, but she's in good form now.”

KimDon Racing's Tizzy in the Sky [post 5, Luis Saez] came up a neck shy of her first stakes win last out when finishing second to Interstatedaydream in the nine-furlong Turnback the Alarm on November 3 here. Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, the 4-year-old daughter of Sky Kingdom led through each point of call under Kendrick Carmouche and raced bravely down the lane, but could not stave off the determined Interstatedaydream, who completed the course in 1:50.34.

A three-time winner from eight starts, Tizzy in the Sky was a dominant 9 3/4-length winner two starts back in a nine-furlong optional claiming contest on October 4 here. Both of her most recent efforts were awarded a career-best 91 Beyer.

Completing the field are the pair of New York-breds in multiple graded stakes-placed Venti Valentine [post 3, Manny Franco] for trainer Jorge Abreu, and Know It All Audrey [post 4, Javier Castellano], a last-out winner of the state-bred Empire Distaff, for conditioner Oscar Barrera, Jr.; along with the Brittany Russell-trained three-time winner Saddle Up Jessie [post 1, Dylan Davis].

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the fall meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

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