Chad Brown Will Saddle Three In Friday’s National Museum Of Racing Hall Of Fame Stakes

Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown will send out three top contenders in Appraise, Mischievous Angel, and Carl Spackler as he looks for a record-equaling seventh score in Friday's Grade 2, $500,000 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame, a one-mile inner turf test for sophomores at Saratoga Race Course.

Brown, who is one victory shy of Hall of Famer Bill Mott's record, has enjoyed previous success in this event with Big Blue Kitten [2011], Takeover Target [2015], Camelot Kitten [2016], Bricks and Mortar [2017], Raging Bull [2018] and Public Sector [2021].

Klaravich Stables' Appraise [post 3, Flavien Prat], by Kodiac, graduated in a 5 1/2-furlong turf sprint here last July ahead of a fourth-place finish in the Skidmore that August over firm Spa turf. He finished a distant second to returning rival Mysterious Night in the Grade 1 Summer, a one-turn mile in September at Woodbine Racetrack to close out his juvenile campaign.

“We rested him last year with sore shins after the race in Canada and the horse came back fine. We were just patient with him,” Brown said. “He's grown a bit and I'm really pleased with the way the horse has developed physically.”

Appraise made a triumphant seasonal debut on July 8 at Belmont, posting a prominent three-quarter length score in a seven-furlong turf allowance versus older company that garnered a career-best 86 Beyer Speed Figure.

“I was very pleased with it and he came back fitter and stronger from the race,” Brown said. “I think he's set up to do fine. I do believe he'll handle the two turns no problem.”

Peter Brant and Parkland Thoroughbreds' impressive maiden winner Mischievous Angel [post 5, Irad Ortiz, Jr.] pounced to a three-quarter length debut win in a six-furlong maiden special weight on June 17 over firm Belmont green. The stylish score garnered a lofty 87 Beyer Speed Figure.

“He only has the one start at a sprint. He has to handle two turns, so we'll see,” Brown said. “His number was very fast, so I gave him time from that race to get over it and just pointed him right to a stakes – primarily because he can run against straight 3-year-olds.”

The Kentucky-bred Into Mischief gelding, a $600,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale purchase, is out of the New York-bred Scat Daddy mare Sabrina's Angel, who is a half-sister to Empire State-bred 2018 Grade 1 Florida Derby-winner Audible.

The well-regarded Carl Spackler [post 10, Tyler Gaffalione] lost a heartbreaker in his January debut traveling 1 1/16-miles over firm Gulfstream turf, taking the lead at the stretch call only to be collared by eventual Grade 1 Belmont Derby Invitational-winner Far Bridge in the final jumps.

The Lope de Vega chestnut exited that effort to graduate by 8 3/4-lengths traveling one mile over the same course ahead of a last-out eighth in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 2 American Turf on May 6 at Churchill.

“He's a horse we've always been very high on. He went to Churchill and didn't handle the turf at all,” Brown said. “He came out of the race sick and I had to rest him a little bit and get him healthy. He came back training well. The prize money is big this year, so we're going to just take a shot.”

Carl Spackler is out of the graded stakes-winning More Than Ready mare Zindaya, who is a half-sister to 2011 Grade 1 Jamaica Handicap-winner Western Aristocrat.

Courtlandt Farms' General Jim [post 6, Luis Saez], a dual graded-stakes winner on dirt, will switch back to turf for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey.

The Into Mischief bay posted his first two wins traveling 1 1/16-miles over turf, graduating at second asking in September at Saratoga ahead of a sharp allowance score one month later at Keeneland. General Jim made his next four starts on dirt, taking the seven-furlong Grade 3 Swale in February at Gulfstream Park and the Grade 2 Pat Day Mile in May at Churchill Downs.

He enters Friday's one-mile inner-turf test for sophomores from a distant sixth-place finish in the seven-furlong Grade 1 Woody Stephens presented by Mohegan Sun on June 10 at Belmont Park.

“He broke his maiden here on the turf and he was very impressive in an 'a other than' at Keeneland, so why not,” McGaughey said.

McGaughey said he expects Luis Saez will be able to engineer a close stalking trip when they exit post 6.

“He's got speed, too. He'll be laying up close,” McGaughey said.

General Jim has breezed three times over the Oklahoma training turf, including a half-mile move in 52.34 on Friday.

“He breezed good and galloped out good,” McGaughey said.

The $850,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase is out of the stakes-placed Curlin mare Inspired by Grace, a full sister to multiple graded stakes winner Off the Tracks and a half-sister to dual graded stakes-winner Concord Point.

Godolphin's Irish-homebred Mysterious Night [post 8, Richie Mullen] has finished off-the-board in two starts since taking the Grade 1 Summer last year at Woodbine for trainer Charlie Appleby.

The Dark Angel gelding finished seventh in the one-mile Group 3 Craven in April at Newmarket as the wagering favorite and followed on June 24 with a 12th-place effort in the seven-furlong Group 3 Jersey at Royal Ascot.

Mysterious Night, out of the Shamardal mare Mistrusting, is a full-brother to the Godolphin/Appleby-campaigned Althiqa, who won a pair of Grade 1s in 2021 on the NYRA circuit, taking the Just a Game at Belmont and the Diana at Saratoga. He will add blinkers for his Spa debut.

“He's looking really well,” said Chris Connett, Appleby's travelling assistant. “He's a Grade 1 winner at two and had two runs in the UK which have been slightly below par from what we'd like, but bringing him to America and get him on to quicker ground around the turns might just be where he really thrives. That's what we saw a from him as a 2-year-old in Canada.”

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher will be represented by Bat Flip [post 2, Jose Ortiz], who makes his first start since a prominent score on November 26 in the Central Park traveling one-mile over firm Aqueduct turf.

“It's kind of a tall order off the bench, but we like the way he's been training,” Pletcher said. “He seemed to really take to the grass and we're really pleased with that, so we thought we'd give him a chance. He just had a little hiccup where we had to stop on him for a while, but he's come back in great form.”

Owned by Harrell Ventures and Starlight Racing, the Good Magic colt made his first two starts on dirt before a runner-up finish to next-out graded stakes-winner and returning rival Nagirroc in September over firm Belmont at the Big A turf. He entered the Central Park from a gate-to-wire maiden win in October traveling 1 1/16-miles over the same course, besting eventual Grade 2 Pennine Ridge-winner Kalik by 1 3/4-lengths.

Cherie DeVaux will saddle More Than Looks [post 1, John Velazquez], last-out winner of the Grade 3 Manila on July 7 at Belmont Park, for owner Victory Racing Partners.

The More Than Ready colt, bred in Kentucky by Hinkle Farms, was purchased for $135,000 at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale. He is out of the stakes-winning Harlan's Holiday mare Ladies' Privilege, who is a full-sister to multiple graded stakes-winner Takeover Target – winner of the 2015 edition of the Hall of Fame. His third dam, Critical Crew, produced multiple Grade 1-winning New York-bred Critical Eye.

More Than Looks graduated at second asking in March over the Gulfstream Park synthetic, besting next-out winner Hidden Path, who is entered in Saturday's Dueling Grounds Derby at Ellis Park.

The dark bay bested older allowance company in June at Ellis Park, rallying from seventh to post a neck score ahead of a strong 1 1/2-length win in the one-mile Manila that garnered a career-best 94 Beyer Speed Figure.

Nagirroc [post 7, Manny Franco], trained by Graham Motion for Little Red Feather Racing, Madaket Stables and William Strauss, was a pacesetting third last out in the Manila.

The Lea colt made the grade in the six-furlong Grade 3 Futurity in October at Belmont at the Big A ahead of a good third in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf traveling one-mile at Keeneland.

Nagirroc has hit the board in all three starts this year, finishing second in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 3 Transylvania at Keeneland ahead of a prominent 3 1/4-length score in the one-mile James W. Murphy on May 20 at Pimlico.

Bred in Kentucky by Chervenell Thoroughbreds, Nagirroc boasts a record of 8-3-2-3 for purse earnings of $407,550.

Graded stakes-placed Behind Enemy Lines [post 9, Joel Rosario] will look to avenge a narrow defeat to Major Dude last out on June 2 in the Grade 2 Penn Mile.

Trained by Jack Sisterson, the Sioux Nation colt made the lead at the stretch call of the Penn Mile but could not stave off the bid of Major Dude, who prevailed by three-quarters of a length.

The British-bred bay launched his career in Ireland for trainer Joseph O'Brien, winning at second asking over the Dundalk synthetic. He made a winning debut in April for Sisterson, taking the 7 1/2-furlong Cutler Bay by two lengths ahead of a troubled sixth in the 1 1/16-mile American Turf on May 6 at Churchill Downs.

Sisterson said Behind Enemy Lines, who has trained forwardly with six follow-up breezes over the Oklahoma training turf, will look for a similar trip as the Penn Mile with Joel Rosario taking over the reins.

“He'll break running. He doesn't want to be on the lead because he might race a bit free, so Joel will probably have him forwardly placed just behind the leaders and hopefully get a jump on the closers,” Sisterson said.

Rounding out a competitive field is European invader Ocean Vision [post 4, Oisin Murphy] for trainer Tim Donworth.

The U S Navy Flag bay, who sports a ledger of 10-4-0-2, enters from a solid effort on June 11 in the Group 3 Prix Paul de Moussac over good-to-soft going at Longchamp when dead-heating for fifth with Group 1-winner Belbek.

Donworth, a graduate of the Godolphin Flying Start program, garnered his first listed stakes success when Ocean Vision captured the Prix de la Vallee d'Auge in August at Deauville.

The Hall of Fame is slated as Race 8 on Friday's 11-race card which also features the Grade 3, $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Oaks Invitational in Race 7. First post is 1:10 p.m. Eastern.

Saratoga Live will present live coverage and analysis of the Saratoga Race Course summer meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule/.

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Superfecta Phil: Gold Phoenix Leads 1-2-3-4 D’Amato Sweep In Eddie Read

Trainer Phil D'Amato is always good when it comes to a stakes race on the grass, especially at Del Mar. But the five-time shore training champ outdid himself Sunday at turf and surf central when he saddled the first four finishers in the $252,000 Eddie Read Stakes, a Grade 2 turfer at 1 1/8 miles.

Leading the D'Amato parade was a chestnut gelding named Gold Phoenix, who is owned by the partnership of Little Red Feather Racing, Sterling Stables and Marsha Naify. Hot-riding Hector Berrios was aboard the Irish-bred son of Belardo as he cruised to a three-quarter length triumph in 1:48.62. The winner paid $11 and picked up a first-place purse of $150,000 to push his career earnings to $837,757.

Next in line came Little Red Feather, Madaket Stables and Old Bones Racing Stable's Balnikhov, who had a half length on Rockingham Ranch's Masteroffoxhounds. The fourth D'Amato runner was the race favorite, Agave Racing Stable and Sam-Son Farm's veteran Count Again, who went off at 9-5 and finished two and a quarter lengths behind the winner.

Del Mar veteran observers could not recall another occurrence at the track where one trainer saddled the first four finishers in a major stakes race.

This was D'Amato's fourth victory in the Eddie Read. It was the first for Berrios.

D'Amato took over the lead in the trainers' race with three wins on the day to total nine firsts through the first seven days of racing. Berrios also won three races on the afternoon and moved into a tie with Juan Hernandez with 11 victories apiece. Hernandez also tripled on Sunday.

In the track's popular Pick Six, which was run under “mandatory payout” conditions, bettors poured in $3,057,176 into the pool that pushed the total prize to $3,441,665.

When the 11th and final race on the day was run, the numbers said there were 171 winners who picked all six and each of them picked up a payout of $15,915.

Racing will resume at Del Mar on Thursday with a first post of 2 p.m.

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The Chosen Vron ‘Definitely’ To Be Supplemented To Breeders’ Cup Sprint

The Chosen Vron earned an automatic, fees-paid berth into the Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) with his victory Saturday in the six-furlong Bing Crosby (G1) at Del Mar, but California-bred speedster is not nominated to the Breeders' Cup and will have be supplemented for $100,000 to make it into $2-million race in November at Santa Anita.

“We definitely are going to supplement for the Sprint,” said trainer Eric Kruljac, one of four partners who own The Chosen Vron. John Sonderecker owns 40% of the horse, the other three own 20%. ”Especially since it's at Santa Anita this year. We'll possibly look for a prep. Long range you look at your options, but with horses it's a day-to-day thing with their health and such.”

The traditional Breeders' Cup Sprint prep has been the Santa Anita Sprint Championship (G2) in the fall, about a month before the Breeders' Cup.

With the Bing Crosby win, his first at the highest level, The Chosen Vron notched an eighth consecutive win and improved his overall record to 13 wins from 17 lifetime starts. He became a millionaire with the $240,000 winner's share of the purse, elevating his lifetime bankroll to $1,032,678. The vast majority victories have been against fellow California-breds.

“He's perfect this morning,” Kruljac said Sunday. “He's a survivor. He had a lot left at the wire. He could have gone another quarter I think. Watching the replays he looked the strongest. I think he could be a miler.”

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‘The Old Man Came Through’: 9YO Channel Maker Pulls 15-1 Surprise In Bowling Green

Veteran 9-year-old gelding Channel Maker proved that age has not caught up to him when powering to a front-running two-length score for trainer Bill Mott in Sunday's  $250,000 Bowling Green (G2), a 1 3/8-mile inner turf test for older horses at Saratoga Race Course.

“He's one of the happiest horses going to the track,” said Mott. “He doesn't hesitate. He just goes and trains and he's got his ears up. He's happy and dappled from one end to the other. If there's something wrong with them, they don't look like that.”

Owned by Wachtel Stable, Gary Barber, R.A. Hill Stable, and Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, Channel Maker visited the winner's circle for the first time in eight starts since taking the 2022 Grand Couturier last July at Belmont Park. He finished a game sixth in the Man o' War (G1) in May at Belmont where he utilized his usual pacesetting tactics and was beaten 1 1/2 lengths while part of a five-way photo for place honors. This year's edition of the Bowling Green was Channel Maker's fifth attempt in the historic turf marathon, adding to another win in 2018 and a third-place finish in 2020.

Mott said it was the right decision to send Channel Maker out for another try in the Bowling Green versus the 1 5/8-mile John's Call on August 23.

“The old man came through. He ran really well,” said Mott. “Adam [Wachtel] and I were debating which race to go in. There was another race later in the meet and Adam wanted to give him a try in here, so we give him the assist for making the call to give him the shot. The pace scenario was good for him today.”

Away alertly from post six under Manny Franco, Channel Maker bumped with a foe and rushed up to take command through the first turn and past the stands for the first time through opening fractions of :25.40 for the opening quarter and :50.85 for a half mile over the good footing with Tawny Port and Verstappen dueling for second a half-length behind.

Channel Maker ran comfortably down the backstretch after three-quarters in 1:16.15 with his head held high as Verstappen dropped back and Daunt gained ground three-wide outside of Tawny Port. Daunt was asked for more entering the final turn while Tawny Port was asked for his best run from Joel Rosario as post-time favorite Rebel's Romance attempted to advance into contention in mid-pack, but clipped heels with Tawny Port and unseated jockey Richie Mullen.

Exiting the turn, Channel Maker widened his advantage on Verstappen and Tawny Port while Never Explain unleashed a bid from off the pace to challenge widest of all at the top of the lane after one-mile in 1:39.53. A tenacious Channel Maker dug in under steady urging from Franco and bravely turned back the challenges of Verstappen and Never Explain to land the 10th victory of his storied career in a final time of 2:15.21.

Verstappen held onto place honors by a head over the oncoming Never Explain with Daunt completing the superfecta another 2 1/4 lengths back. Tawny Port, Highest Honors, Soldier Rising, who ran for purse money only, and The Grey Wizard completed the order of finish. Rockemperor and Strong Quality were scratched.

Mullen, who was conscious and alert with movement in all extremities, was transported to Albany Medical Center for further evaluation. Rebel's Romance was collared by the outrider and walked home.

Mott said he was confident in Channel Maker's chances of victory when he was able to dictate terms alone on the front end.

“I like the situation we were in when he made the lead and was galloping in front, that was great,” Mott said. “We haven't been able to do that in a while. If there's one speed horse that backs up early, it doesn't matter. But if you get a couple of speed horses and they're all going together, it becomes a long trip.”

Franco, who got aboard the chestnut for the first time since a fourth-place finish in the 2021 Joe Hirsch Turf Classic at Belmont, spoke fondly of Channel Maker and his proficiency as a pacesetter.

“I get along with him really well. I set the pace, that was my plan to get to the lead,” Franco said. “He really enjoys it when he's on the front end, and he proved it again today. The pace helped me a lot. I knew I was the lone speed in the race. I just wanted to go and set the pace because sometimes the other riders know there's no pace in the race and they try to go forward, but I made sure to break well and make the lead and then slow things down. It worked out great.

“He's so cool. I know he's nine, but he feels like he's three,” Franco added. “He always shows up and he proved it again today. He's a nice horse to ride.”

Wachtel, co-owner of Channel Maker, gave high praise to his multimillionaire gelding, the champion turf male of 2020, and said it is possible he will enter the $750,000 Resorts World Casino Sword Dancer (G1) on August 26 for a sixth time in search of his second win in that event after taking the 2020 edition.

“We'll talk about it with the partners and with Bill, but he's obviously had some great moments here at this track,” said Wachtel. “We'll see how he comes out of it. He's something special. Maybe I've had some more talented horses, but this is the best horse I've ever owned. Having him as a 2-year-old, 3-year-old, and now a 9-year-old. Who does that? Bill does that. It's a special win for all of us. It means a lot and I couldn't be more proud.”

Bred in Ontario by Tall Oaks Farm, Channel Maker, who was named the 2017 champion 3-year-old colt in Canada, earned the seventh graded score of his career while banking $137,500 in victory, boosting his total purse earnings to $3,890,358. His dam is the Horse Chestnut mare In Return.

Channel Maker returned $32.40 for a $2 win ticket.

Declan Cannon, aboard the Brendan Walsh-trained runner-up Verstappen, said the son of War Front lacked the needed kick to collar Channel Maker.

“Lovely smooth trip, saved all the ground,” said Cannon. “I thought I was going to do something at the head of the lane and he just lugged in late on me. He didn't do anything wrong. That's a good horse that beat me today. There's definitely one of these races in him, so I'll get mine in.”

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