‘He Went Very Easy’: Mage Pleases In Final Drill For Travers

Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Mage worked six furlongs in 1:15.56 over the main track at Saratoga on Saturday morning in preparation for the $1.25-million Travers (G1) next Saturday at the upstate New York track.

Under partly cloudy skies and temperatures in the 60s, Mage logged his maintenance move with exercise rider J. J. Delgado aboard. NYRA clockers caught the Good Magic colt in splits of :13.60, :26.40, and 50.40 before he galloped out seven furlongs in 1:29.33.

“Mage worked very well this morning. He went very easy,” said trainer Gustavo Delgado.

The breeze was a third local move for Mage, who arrived at the Spa in July. Last Saturday, he covered the six-furlong distance in a sharp 1:12.98.

Gustavo Delgado Jr., the son and assistant to the elder Delgado, said everything went according to plan.

“He did well. It was just a maintenance breeze. He did exactly what my dad told J. J. to do. He wanted 1:15 or 1:16 for six furlongs and that's exactly what he did,” he said.

Following a triumph in the Kentucky Derby, Mage finished third in the Preakness Stakes (G1) on May 19 at Pimlico Race Course, which was won by fellow Travers aspirant National Treasure. He returned to action two months later to run a hard-fought second in the Haskell Invitational (G1) on July 22 at Monmouth Park, finishing 1 3/4 lengths behind the victorious Geaux Rocket Ride.

The younger Delgado also said Mage has acclimated well to his Saratoga surroundings.

“He likes it here. It's been three weeks already that we're here and he shows us all the good signs,” he said. “It helps him to be at the track with time. In the Preakness, we arrived Wednesday and ran Saturday and for the Haskell it was the same thing, we got there earlier in the week and ran that Saturday. But here, he's been able to adapt.”

Mage is owned by OGMA Investments, Ramiro Restrepo, Sterling Racing and CMNWLTH.

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Opening Night Thriller: Former Claimer Paluxy Pulls 24-1 Upset In Governor’s Cup At Remington

A year ago, Paluxy was running for a $25,000 claiming tag at Remington Park and couldn't have warmed up 2021 Oklahoma Derby (G3) winner Warrant, conditioned by nation's current leading trainer, Brad Cox.

It's amazing the difference a year makes. Blue and Gold Racing (Mike Combs) of Kingfisher, Okla., claimed Paluxy out of that race in August 2022 and it paid off Friday night at Remington Park as the gelding scored the biggest win of his career at 24-1 odds.

Paluxy, the former claimer, fought off millionaire Warrant in the final strides to win the $100,600 Governor's Cup, a listed stakes, by a head in a thrilling last-to-first victory on opening night of the 2023 Thoroughbred meet at the Oklahoma City racetrack.

Under jockey Floyd Wethey Jr., Paluxy hit the wire with Warrant in the 1 1/8-mile race and prevailed in the photo finish.

A 5-year-old gelding trained by Scott Young, Paluxy earned his first stakes win after covering the distance in 1:52.77. Warrant, the 3-5 favorite, checked in three lengths in front of third-place finisher Holden the Lute, the early pacesetter.

“All the credit goes to these guys,” Young said, pointing to a contingent of his owners in Blue and Gold Racing in the winner's circle. “They had enough faith in me and our barn to give this horse the time he needed to get prepared for this. We always thought he had a chance to be really good. I thought we had him ready for the Cornhusker Handicap (G3) (July 8 at Prairie Meadows), but he had a really bad trip in that race (finishing seventh).”

Friday night was a different story. Paluxy, a son of Brody's Cause out of Grade 2-placed Miss Pippa, by Master Command, had a clean trip and it was just a matter of heart and a bit of luck at the wire.

“Scott and I talked about the race and decided it was best to take back, save ground, and see if we could beat Warrant,” said Wethey. “He ran huge.”

Wethey was asked if he knew he had the victory at the wire and he replied, “You never know against a horse like Warrant. He's a great horse, but we had him today.”

Paluxy paid $51.40 for the win.

The remaining order of finish in the Governor's Cup was Number One Dude (4th), Sonneman (5th), Presidential (6th), and Kokokomo (7th).

Paluxy has a 7-3-4 from 20 career starts and $224,244 in lifetime earnings. He was bred in Kentucky by Spendthrift Farm and sold to Lori and Mark Collinsworth for $45,000 at the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, where Warrendale Sales consigned him..

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Sister Otoole Repeats In CTT & TOC Stakes At Del Mar

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners' Sister Otoole did an instant replay in the featured attraction Friday evening at Del Mar, as she came from last once again – just as she had here in 2022 – and rolled to an impressive 1 1/4-length tally in the $101,000 CTT & TOC Stakes at 11 furlongs on the grass.

The winner, a 6-year-old mare trained by eastern-based H. Graham Motion, had the Italian expat Antonio Fresu in the boot. Last year when she won the race by half a length, she had another Italian expat in the irons, Umberto Rispoli.

Finishing second in the feature was John McCormack's Eylara, who had a half length on race favorite Neige Blanche, owned by De Seroux, Naify or M. Powell.

Final time of the marathon was 2:17.45. The winner picked up a check for $60,000, thus increasing her earnings to $395,470. She paid $12.60 top her backers for the win.

Racing resumes at Del Mar Saturday with a 10-race card highlighted by the 67th edition of the Grade 1, $300,000 Del Mar Oaks. First post is at 2 p.m. Sunday's scheduled card has been cancelled because of an oncoming hurricane/tropical storm.

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Arrogate Son Breaks Maiden Over Hurdles At Colonial

We haven't seen many Arrogates over jumps, but an NSA newcomer with the late stallion's bloodlines put in a late move under Graham Watters to take Friday's maiden special weights hurdle for 4-year-olds, the first of three steeplechase races on the Colonial Card.

A field of eight faced starter Harrison Young, and it was Leipers Fork Steeplechasers' Garrison Forest, with Robbie Dunne, who took the lead and held it for much of the 2 1/4-mile contest. Though the field was never spread out by more than five or so lengths, Garrison Forest was determined to show the way, and repelled multiple challenges by Del Rio Racing's Tiger to Remember (Bernie Dalton), who stalked in second throughout and secured the advantage turning for home the final time.

Several horses made a late move into the stretch, but navigating into the straightaway became more challenging as loose horse Travesuras headed the field, causing potential traffic problems. But it was Daniel Baker's Aftermath, trained by Mark Beecher and making only his second try over hurdles, who took command with a sixteenth of a mile to go and coasted clear by a length. Tiger to Remember held the place spot with Gill Johnston's Active Duty (Tom Garner) third.

For Aftermath, who made his NSA debut in a maiden claimer at the Queen's Cup in late April, it was his third career victory in 25 starts. Most of those previous starts came at Laurel and Turfway Park.

Animal Kingston gives Watters a riding double

William Russell's Animal Kingston made a late bid to overtake a determined Ancient Times to take the $35,000 overnight handicap for horses rated at 115 or less by about three-quarters of a length.

Ridden by Graham Watters for trainer Neil Morris, Animal Kingston — along with three other starters — found themselves far back of the leader, Carrington Holdings' Ancient Times (Conor Tierney) for most of the 2 1/4 miles.

Ancient Times broke on top and extended his lead to around 20 lengths, and carried that advantage into the stretch. Rounding the far turn the final time it looked as if Animal Kingston and Jacqueline Ohrstrom's Tease and Seize (Mell Boucher) would zoom past the tiring leader — whose fizzle was colorfully described by the racecaller as “evaporating like a snow cone in Virginia.” But Ancient Times, despite setting all of the fractions, dug in gamely as Animal Kingston drew alongside, and still maintained a slight lead with 100 yards to go. It was only in the final few strides that Animal Kingston passed his foe to give Watters the victory. Tease and Seize finished third.

Animal Kingston, an eight-year-old son of Animal Kingdom, has had a long and successful career on the flat and over jumps. This was his seventh career victory — along with 18 other in-the-money performances — in 40 starts.

Bourbon Diversion goes wire to wire in filly and mare hurdle

Carrington Holdings' Bourbon Diversion, a four-year-old daughter of Bellamy Road, snatched the lead shortly after the break, controlled the pace, and held off a challenge by Bonnie Rye Stable's Afraid Not to score in the $40,000 filly and mare hurdle at 2 1/4 miles.

Ridden by Tom Garner for trainer Arch Kingsley, the New York-bred, making her second start over jumps, quickly extended her advantage to as much as eight lengths heading up the backside the first time around the course. Afraid Not (Gerard Galligan) sat in second, with the rest of the field close behind.

There was little change in position throughout the race, as Bourbon Diversion maintained a lead of about five lengths with three-sixteenths of a mile to go. As the leader rounded the far turn the final time, Afraid Not inched closer, gradually gaining ground and shrinking the lead to about three lengths with a furlong remaining. Afraid Not continued to narrow the gap, but fell a length short of Bourbon Diversion at the wire. Atlantic Friends Racing's Lacey Underall (Mell Boucher) was another 4 1/2 lengths back in third.

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