Revamped Schedule: Florida Sire Stakes Kicks Off Saturday At Gulfstream

The FTBOA Florida Sire Stakes will be featured on Saturday's program at Gulfstream Park, where the tradition-rich annual series for 2-year-olds sired by accredited Florida stallions will get under way a little later than usual.

Traditionally scheduled for the last Saturday of July or first Saturday in August, the $100,000 Dr. Fager and the $100,000 Desert Vixen for fillies will launch a revamped schedule that is designed to benefit horses, owners and breeders by a later start and more time between races.

“We thought as a horseman's group that it was important, and the breeders got on board,” said trainer Joe Orseno, president of the Florida Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association. “I think we'll see in the long run that horses will stay sounder and compete longer in life.”

The six-furlong Dr. Fager and Desert Vixen, will be followed on the new spread-out schedule by the $200,000 Affirmed and the $200,000 Susan's Girl for fillies at seven furlongs on Oct. 21 and the $300,000 In Reality and the $300,000 My Dear Girl for fillies at 1 1/16 miles on Dec. 2.

The new FSS schedule provides greater opportunity for late-developing 2-year-olds.

“The horses that were bought out of the June sale, those horses had no chance to compete in the first leg. Now, they have the opportunity just like the March and April babies,” Orseno said.

The revamped schedule is expected to make the long-standing juvenile series even better.

“It's a very important program. No 1, for the stallions. It gives them a chance to showcase their babies while running against the offspring of other Florida stallions,” Orseno said. “It's a good program for people who want to race Florida-breds and run them in South Florida.”

The FSS series has produced national stars in the past, including two Jacks or Better Farm homebreds — Awesome Feather, who swept the 2010 FSS series before winning the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) and an Eclipse Award, and Jackson Bend, who swept the FSS series in 2009 before going on to become a Grade 1 stakes winning millionaire. Harold Queen's Big Drama, who swept the 2008 FSS series, went on to capture the 2010 Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) and an Eclipse Award as North America's champion sprinter.

A field of 10 colts and geldings has been assembled for this year's Dr. Fager, including Leon King Stable Corp.'s undefeated Bentornato, who is coming off a sparkling 4 ½-length victory in the six-furlong Proud Man at Gulfstream, and BC Racing LLC's Dickens, a first-out winner who finished third in the Sanford (G3) at Saratoga after setting a pressured pace.

Averill Racing and Two Eight Racing LLC's R Harper Rose, who produced a dazzling a 6 ¼-length debut victory, will need to outrun seven other talented fillies to capture her stakes debut in the Desert Vixen.

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Red Knight Shoots For KY Turf Cup Repeat As Maker Seeks Record Sixth Win

Headed by four Grade 1 winners and a trio of Grade 2 victors, an overflow field of 16 was entered Monday for Saturday's $1.7-million FanDuel Kentucky Turf Cup (G2). The 1 1/2-mile event is a “Win and You're In” Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race for the $4-million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf in November at Santa Anita.4

The Kentucky Turf Cup anchors a 12-race program that also includes four Grade 2 stakes and two Grade 3s. The special first post is 11:30 a.m. (CT). FanDuel TV will televise all the races live from the FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs.

Twelve horses can start in the marquee race, with another four entries on the “also-eligible” list needing scratches in order to run.

Mike Maker, Kentucky Downs' all-time winningest trainer, entered four horses in pursuit of a record sixth victory in the Kentucky Turf Cup. That includes last year's winner Red Knight, who returns at age 9 as a Grade 1 winner after taking Belmont Park's Man o' War in May. Maker also is running Therapist, who at age 8 earned his first Grade 1 victory when he took Monmouth Park's United Nations in his last start, a race in which Red Knight was a late-running third.

The only horse entered who isn't a graded stakes winner is the Maker-trained Me and Mr. C, who got into the overflow field by virtual of capturing the 1 1/4-mile Kentucky Downs Preview Turf Cup at Ellis Park. Even so, Me and Mr. C is a five-time stakes winner. Maker's fourth entrant, Grade 2-placed Red Run, needs four scratches to get into the starting gate.

Trainer Brendan Walsh entered two-time Grade 1 winner Santin and Keeneland's Elkhorn (G2) winner Verstappen. Santin, winner of last year's Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic (G1) and the Arlington Million (G1) staged at Churchill Downs, comes into the Kentucky Turf Cup off a second-place finish in the 2023 Arlington Million, which was relocated to Colonial Downs in Virginia.

Paulo Lobo, who teamed with jockey Joe Talamo to win the Kentucky Turf Cup two years ago with the Argentine-bred Imperador, returns to the 1 1/2-mile stakes with Nautilus, a Grade 1 winner last year in his native Brazil. Nautilus won an off-the-turf Ellis Park allowance race by a nose in his last start.

Other graded-stakes winners include Spooky Channel and Never Explain. Trainer Chris Block brings Another Mystery back for another crack at the Kentucky Turf Cup after the horse finished third last year by a nose and a neck. Kitodan, winner of last year's Dueling Grounds Derby (G3), will run back in the Turf Cup after finishing seventh in the meet's opening-day FanDuel Tapit Stakes.

The horse to catch could be the Mark Casse-trained Get Smoking, who finished second by a neck in the Grade 2 Wise Dan at Ellis Park and then was fourth by a total of a length in the Ellis Park prep for the Kentucky Turf Cup.

A Kentucky-bred winner of the Kentucky Turf Cup will bring home $1 million; a non-Kentucky-bred winner will still earn about $800,000.

The field for the Kentucky Turf Cup, including post position, (weight), trainer/jockey:

PP (weight) horse trainer/jockey

1 Foreign Relations (124) Conor Murphy/John Velazquez

2 Red Knight (124) Mike Maker/Tyler Gaffalione

3 Verstappen (124) Brendan Walsh/Declan Cannon

4 Santin (122) Brendan Walsh/Florent Geroux

5 Get Smokin (122) Mark Casse/Fernando De La Cruz

6 Me and Mr. C (124) Mike Maker/Gerardo Corrales

7 Kitodan (122) Eric Foster/Irad Ortiz

8 Never Explain (124) Shug McGaughey/Joel Rosario

9 Nautilus (122) Paulo Lobo/Joe Talamo

10 Another Mystery (122) Chris Block/Brian Hernandez

11 Therapist (124) Mike Maker/Javier Castellano

12 Spooky Channel (124) Jason Barkley/James Graham

13 AE Sy Dog (122) Graham Motion/Jareth Loveberry

14 AE Cellist (122) Rusty Arnold/Martin Garcia

15 AE Highest Honors (122) Chad Brown/Irad Ortiz

16 AE Red Run (122) Mike Maker/Vincent Cheminaud

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Nutella Fella Powers From Last To Spring 54-1 Hopeful Upset

Trainer Gary Contessa, who sent out 21-1 maiden Becky's Joker to capture the Schuylerville (G3) on opening day at Saratoga, successfully bookended the meet Monday when Bell Gable Stable's Nutella Fella rallied to a 54-1 upset under Junior Alvarado to capture closing day's 300,000 Hopeful (G1), a seven-furlong sprint for juveniles.

The Runhappy colt, previously trained by Richard Sillaman, was fractious at the gate and broke a length behind the field in his last-out debut score under Kevin Gomez traveling 5 1/2-furlongs on July 26 at Delaware Park.

The $12,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase by Anthony Farrior was transferred to Contessa and breezed extensively at Saratoga in preparation for the Hopeful, including a five-eighths effort in 1:01.85 August 19 over the Oklahoma training track, a seven-eighths effort in 1:29.66 last Sunday over the main track and a three-eighths effort in :34.80 Thursday on the Oklahoma.

Contessa credited NYRA's head starter Hector Soler and his team, in part, for the victory along with a smart steer by Alvarado, whose agent Mike Sellitto spotted the horse at the Spa and picked up the call.

“The New York gate crew made this happen as much as I did,” Contessa said. “He was an absolute maniac in the gate at Delaware Park and Hector and the gate crew on the training track side worked with him every day and absolutely straightened him out, and I have a lot of thanks for that gate crew.

“I was hoping for that [performance]. He trained like it,” Contessa added. “Mike, Junior Alvarado's agent, watched him work, ran over to my barn and said, 'Junior's got to ride this horse.' I said, 'OK,' and I let him work him a few times and the rest is history.”

Nutella Fella broke last-of-10 and trailed the field as Just Steel outdueled Sanford (G3) winner Yo Yo Candy and the Bob Baffert-trained Mission Beach to mark the opening quarter-mile in :22.19  and a half-mile in :44.89 over the fast main track.

Mission Beach took command through the turn with Just Steel giving way and the Florent Geroux-piloted Timberlake advancing with purpose. Meanwhile, Nutella Fella advanced inside of longshot Baytown Chatterbox before tipping outside and then back in again while passing rivals and making up ground with every stride.

Timberlake, sent to post as the 2-1 mutuel favorite, looked for racing room as the field straightened away and found it splitting the front-running Mission Beach, who had a head advantage at the stretch call, and the maiden Be You. But Nutella Fella vaulted beyond them all with a seven-wide wide run, overtaking Pirate, Be You, and Timberlake in the final eighth of a mile to post a 1 1/2-length win in a final time of 1:24.41.

Timberlake completed the exacta by a neck over Pirate, who broke inward at the start, with Be You, Mission Beach, Gold Sweep, Just Steel, Baytown Chatterbox, Valentine Candy, and Yo Yo Candy completing the order of finish. The Baffert-trained Muth was scratched and will be re-routed to the American Pharoah (G1) on October 7 at Santa Anita Park.

The victory marked the third stakes win of the meet for Alvarado, who took the Curlin [Scotland] and P.G. Johnson [Magic Cross] for trainer Bill Mott. Alvarado said the swift pace benefitted Nutella Fella.

“I watched his last race and knew he had a problem in the gate. He broke a little flat footed out of there. Even though the plan was to come from behind, I still would have loved to break a little better, just to be a little more close to the pace,” Alvarado said. “But they were going very fast. When I worked him, he worked beautifully with me. He went six furlongs and he galloped out very strong. I was hoping they would come back to me a little bit because I knew he had the stamina to get the distance today. He really ran great.

“When I started asking him through the traffic, we were passing horses on the outside and the inside,” Alvarado added. “He was already in a run and I didn't want to bother him at that point. I just kept riding him and he kept finding more for me.”

The Brad Cox-trained Timberlake, a $350,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, earned an 85 Beyer Speed Figure for his second-out graduation on July 21 at Ellis Park.

Geroux said Timberlake was in a good position turning for home, sitting behind the fading speed of the Joel Rosario-piloted Just Steel.

“I thought I got a good setup, you know I was right behind Joel, waited for my turn, split horses, I got through, just made the lead for like maybe barely a sixteenth of a mile, but the other horse ran me down right away,” Geroux said.

Contessa said Nutella Fella will remain in Saratoga and train into the $500,000 Champagne (G1) on October 7 at Belmont at the Big A, which offers a “Win and You're In” berth to the Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) on Nov. 3 at Santa Anita Park.

“Champagne to Breeders' Cup, unless he throws us a curve,” Contessa said. “He's going to stay up here the next six weeks with me and we'll be racing in the Champagne from here.”

Bred in Kentucky by Ashview Farm, Nutella Fella is out of the Candy Ride mare Krissy's Candy, who is a half-sister to the graded stakes-placed duo Danny Boy and Meal Penalty. He banked $165,000 in victory and returned $111 for a $2 win bet.

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