Be Better Proves Best In Deputed Testamony; Beguine Takes Alma North At Laurel

Repole Stable's Be Better, a homebred son of champion Uncle Mo, extended his win streak to three races by passing multiple stakes winners Nimitz Class and Ournationonparade in deep stretch and going on to a 1¼-length triumph in Saturday's $100,000 Deputed Testamony at Laurel Park.

The 27th running of the 1 1/8-mile Deputed Testamony for 3-year-olds and up and the seventh renewal of the $100,000 Alma North for fillies and mares going 6½ furlongs were among five stakes worth $500,000 in purses headlined by the $150,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash for older sprinters.

Ridden by Sheldon Russell for his wife, Maryland's leading trainer Brittany Russell, Be Better ($7.80) picked up his first stakes win in his fifth start since being sent to the Mid-Atlantic after going 2-for-7 primarily in New York for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher.

“He showed up in great shape. I didn't have a whole lot to do,” Brittany Russell said. “Really we just kind of got him happy. He seems to really like Maryland. We found a couple spots for him that seemed to pick his head up and that seemed to give him some confidence.”

Be Better ran second and third in his first two tries for Russell in the spring at Laurel, both at a mile, before breaking through with a 3¾-length optional claiming allowance victory May 20 on the undercard of the 148th Preakness Stakes (G1)) at Pimlico Race Course.

In his prior start, Be Better again came from off the pace to notch a 5¼-length third-level allowance score June 17 at Laurel, his second straight going 1 1/16 miles. The Deputed Testamony was his fourth overall win and first in four tries at 1 1/8 miles.

“We've had this race on our radar for some time, since he won the three-other-than. We had some some options to run in New York and Delaware, but we opted to just point to this race and give him some time and it seemed to work out,” Russell said. “When you see the overnight come out and you see the horses in the race, it was a tough spot. But, as good as he's been doing and stepping forward I felt like he was up to the task.”

Ournationonparade, one of two horses in the Deputed Testamony for red-hot trainer Jamie Ness, outran his rivals to the front and led through an easy opening quarter-mile of 25.59 seconds. Nimitz Class, the 1-9 favorite who had a five-race win streak – including four consecutive Laurel stakes – snapped last time out, settled in second followed by 14-time career winner Yodel E.A. Who and Be Better.

Sheldon Russell remained unhurried on Be Better as the half went in :49.84 without a change in running order, though Nimitz Class began to close the gap on the leader. They reached the top of the stretch together and Nimitz Class was able to ease by Ournationparade passing the eighth pole, but Be Better was only starting to roll on the far outside and surged past them both, finishing up in 1:49.68 over a fast main track.

“It's great,” Brittany Russell said. “Just watching Sheldon's body language as he was riding him, I just felt like he had horse and I felt like when he tipped him out he was going make a run. It was just a matter of if he was going to get there.”

Nimitz Class stayed up for second, a half-length ahead of Ournationonparade, with stablemate Yodel E.A. Who seven lengths back in fourth.

“I'm delighted. I'm so excited. I have to thank Mike Repole and his team. They've been super supportive in sending us a horse like this,” Russell said. “It's huge. I'm very thankful for these guys. Winning races like this today, it's a lot of fun.”

Beguine Goes The Distance In Alma North

Beguine, a 4-year-old homebred daughter of Gun Runner owned by Charles Matses and trained by Edward Allard, led gate-to-wire to win the $100,000 Alma North, covering 6½ furlongs in 1:15.83.

Out of the five-time winning mare Shananies Song, Beguine, second by a neck last year in the Fantasy (G3), has won two of her three starts this year. The Alma North turned out to be pretty straight forward for Beguine and jockey Jevian Toledo, who went to the front, clicked off fractions of :22.70 and :45.52, and drove home 2 3/4 lengths in front of Response Time. Dreamster checked in third.

Only five went to post in the Alma North after Street Lute, Prince Kokachin, Sweet Gracie, and Moody Woman scratched.

Also on Saturday's card, Steven Walfish's Super Accelerate, stepping up to stakes company for the first time, got a patient trip from jockey Horacio Karamanos and dug in late to fend off a pair of challengers for a half-length victory in the $75,000 Star de Naskra. By Accelerate, Super Accelerate ($6.60) ran his win streak to three races for trainer Robin Graham.

Midwest shipper Easy Action, without a start since April 14 and racing as a new gelding, was sharp from the gate and went the opening quarter-mile in :23.45  as Super Accelerate saved ground inside and multiple stakes winner Coffeewithchris in the clear three wide.

Coffeewithchris ranged up alongside Super Accelerate rounding the far turn and was set down for a drive with Easy Action making his bid on the rail, but neither horse was able to get by a determined Super Accelerate, who crossed the wire in 1:22.54 over a fast main track. Easy Action edged Coffeewithchris by a neck for second.

Waldorf Racing Stables' Talk to the Judge, stretched out an extra furlong and a half and returned to the dirt following a failed turf attempt two weeks earlier, led from start to finish to register a 13-1 upset in the $75,000 Miss Disco.

Trained by Marya Montoya, Talk to the Judge ($28.40) gave jockey Victor Carrasco his second straight Miss Disco victory following Divine Huntress last year.

Carrasco was able to settle Talk to the Judge on the lead through fractions of :23.02 and :45.37 with 2022 Maryland Juvenile Fillies runner-up Fast Tracked and 30-1 long shot Willful Desire giving closest chase. Liquidator, coming back eight days off a 5½-furlong victory at Laurel, was next while favored Malibu Moonshine ran last of eight.

Talk to the Judge, a 4-year-old Maryland-bred Golden Lad filly, remained in command at the top of the stretch with Liquidator to her outside looming as the main competitor. Under Carrasco's urging, Talk to the Judge was able to withstand a steady bid from Liquidator to win by a head in 1:23.81. It was two lengths back to late-running 12-1 long shot Rowsie Express in third.

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Ellis Park: Lucrative Stakes Trio Kicks Off KY Downs Preview Weekend Next Saturday

Godolphin's newly minted turf specialist Wadsworth will return to Ellis Park and headline a field of 12 3-year-olds entered in next Saturday's second running of the $200,000 KY Downs Preview Dueling Grounds Derby.

The Dueling Grounds Derby Preview, run at 1 1/8 miles on turf, is one of seven stakes contests that will be held next weekend at Ellis Park as part of Kentucky Downs Preview Days. The KY Downs Dueling Grounds Preview will go to post in Race 8 with a post time of 3:22 p.m. (all times Central) The nine-race card has a first post of 11:45 a.m.

Saturday's stakes trio also includes the $200,000 KY Downs Preview Mint Ladies Turf Sprint and the $200,000 KY Downs Preview Mint Millions Mile. The winner of the Dueling Grounds Derby Preview will receive an automatic entry to the $1-million Dueling Grounds Derby (G3) on Sunday, Sept. 3 at Kentucky Downs.

Trained by Brad Cox, Wadsworth dug in late to defeat five rivals in the American Derby by one length. The 3-year-old gelded son of Quality Road is a three-time winner from 10 starts. Prior to the American Derby Wadsworth finished second by a scant nose to Gigante in the Caesars Stakes. Wadsworth spent his winter at Turfway Park where he impressively broke his maiden by 10 lengths and won a first level allowance by 2½ lengths on the Tapeta surface. Jockey Florent Geroux will once again have the mount from post No. 10.

Richard Ravin and Patricia's Hope's Act a Fool will be in search of his fifth-consecutive victory when he breaks from post 6 in the Dueling Grounds Derby Preview. Act a Fool's only blemish in his young career was in his debut when he didn't show much run over the Tapeta surface at Turfway. Since then, the Larry Rivelli-trained son of Oscar Performance has won four straight starts by open lengths including a 4 ½-length score in the Hawthorne Derby. Jockey Gerardo Corrales will have the call.

Another accomplished 3-year-old that entered the KY Downs Preview Dueling Grounds Derby is Barry and Joni Butzow's Golden Bandit. Trained by Coty Rosin, Golden Bandit was a former $12,500 claim but has since won the Canterbury Derby. Jockey Adam Beschizza will retain the mount from post 2.

The field for the KY Downs Preview Dueling Grounds Derby from the rail out (with jockey and trainer):

 1. Highway Robber (Mitchell Murrill, Brian Lynch)

2. Golden Bandit (Beschizza, Rosin)

3. Hidden Path (Corey Lanerie, Todd Pletcher)

4. Worthington (Gerardo Corrales, Mike Maker)

5. Lincoln Highway (Rafael Bejarano, Vicki Oliver)

6. Act a Fool (Torres, Rivelli)

7. Anglophile (Declan Cannon, Brian Lynch)

8. Tall Boy (Rey Gutierrez, Doug O'Neill)

9. Georgie W (Alex Achard, Will Walden)

10. Wadsworth (Geroux, Cox)

11. Desert Duke (Francisco Arrieta, Chris Hartman)

12. Sharar (James Graham, Todd Pletcher)

13. Manciata d'Oro (Martin Chuan, Cox)

Fuerteventura Tops Mint Millions Mile

Multiple stakes winner Fuerteventura leads a competitive cast of 12 older horses that entered Saturday's seventh running of the $200,000 KY Downs Mint Millions Mile Preview.

The Mint Millions Turf Mile Preview, which will award the winner a spot in the Sept. 2, $2-million Mint Millions, was made the finale on the nine-race card. The field for the one-mile turf contest will go to post at 3:55 p.m.

Trained by Jonathan Thomas, Fuerteventura has competed at eight tracks across North America in just 10 starts. The 4-year-old son of Summer Front won the Brooks Fields Mile Stakes at Canterbury in late June and his resume also includes a gutsy victory in last year's Jersey Derby at Monmouth Park. Jockey Florent Geroux will have the call from post 7.

The competitive field for the Mint Millions Preview also includes Porch Light Racing, Brandon Tucker, Raul Bras, Haugh Stables and Highlight Thoroughbreds' narrow runner-up in the Schuster Memorial Underdressed; trainer Mike Maker's duo of last-out allowance winner Heaven Street and stakes winner Max K.O.; and Lothenbach Stables dominant dirt allowance winner Minnesota Ready.

The complete field for the Mint Millions Turf Mile Preview from the rail out (with jockey and trainer):

 1. Minnesota Ready (Corey Lanerie, Neil Pessin)      

2. Trafalgar (Edgar Morales, Chris Hartman)

3. Big Dreaming (James Graham, Wayne Catalano)

4. Gray's Fable (Declan Cannon, Brian Lynch)

5. Heaven Street (Cristian Torres, Maker)

6.Hozier (Julien Leparoux, Rodolphe Brisset)

7. Fuerteventura (Geroux, Thomas)

8.Greyes Creek (Adam Beschizza, Paulo Lobo)      

9.Play Action Pass (Joe Ramos, Robert Medina)    

10.Santos Dumont (Francisco Arrieta, Chris Hartman)    

11. Underdressed (Orlando Mojica, Rey Hernandez)

12. Max K. O. (Gerardo Corrales, Maker)

Goin Good Headlines Mint Ladies Turf Sprint

Klein Racing's classy mare Goin Good tops a field of 10 filly and mare sprinters that were entered in Saturday's fifth running of the $200,000 KY Downs Preview Mint Ladies Turf Sprint at Ellis Park Racing & Gaming.

Goin Good and her combatants will go to post in Race 7 of 9 at 2:50 p.m. First post is 11:45 a.m.

The winner of the Ky Downs Mint Ladies Turf Sprint, run at 5½ furlongs on turf, will receive an all-fees paid entry to the Sept. 9, $1-million Ladies Turf Sprint (G2) at Kentucky Downs.

Owned by longtime family stable Klein Racing, Goin Good will be in search of her second stakes victory after nearly missing in the Clarksville Handicap last time out at Horseshoe Indianapolis. Goin Good, who races for trainer Brad Cox, won the Coronation Cup two years ago at Saratoga and has been stakes placed eight times in her 18-race career. Goin Good will be ridden by Cristian Torres from post No. 3.

Bridlewood Farm's Bay Storm will be in search of her fifth-lifetime victory in the Ky Downs Preview Mint Ladies Turf Sprint. Trained by Jonathan Thomas, Bay Storm has yet to find the winner's circle this season but has been stakes placed in the Megahertz (G3) and Wishing Well Stakes at Santa Anita and the Unbridled Sidney at Churchill Downs. The ultra-consistent Bay Storm has only finished outside the Top 3 twice from 15 starts. Her record stands at 15-4-6-3 with purse earnings that total $590,080. Jockey Florent Geroux will have the mount from the rail.

The complete field for the KY Downs Preview Mint Ladies Turf Sprint (with jockey and trainer):

1. Bay Storm (Geroux, Thomas)

2. Love and Money (Joe Ramos, Cherie DeVaux)

3. Goin' Good (Cristian Torres, Cox)

4. Linguistic (Gerardo Corrales, Eric Foster)

5. Miner's Queen (Rafael Bejarano, Rey Hernandez)

6. Showgirl Lynne B (James Graham, Joe Sharp)

7. Souper Munnings (Chris Landeros, Ian Wilkes)

8. New Boss (Rey Gutierrez, Bret Calhoun)

9. Semble Juste (IRE) (Corey Lanerie, Kenny McPeek)

10. Quaria Comet (Joe Talamo, Paulo Lobo)

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Charge It ‘Excellent’ In Final Whitney Breeze; West Will Power Tunes Up But Start TBD

Whisper Hill Farm's homebred Charge It went a half-mile in :48.77  Saturday morning on Saratoga Race Course's main track in his final tune up for next Saturday's $1-million Whitney (G1).

Trained by  four-time Whitney winning trainer Todd Pletcher, Charge It, enters the prestigious 1 1/8-mile test from a 4 3/4-length win in the 1 1/4-mile Suburban (G2) on July 8 at Belmont Park, where the son of Tapit registered a 106 Beyer Speed Figure.

“I thought it was excellent. He did it well in hand and looked good doing it. I've been very pleased with the way he's trained since the Suburban,” said Pletcher, who campaigned previous Whitney winners Left Bank [2002], Lawyer Ron [2007], Cross Traffic [2013] and Life Is Good [2022].

The Suburban victory was a redemptive one for Charge It, who was fourth in the Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan Handicap (G1) on June 10 at Belmont after finishing fifth as the favorite in the Oaklawn Handicap (G2) on April 22.

During his sophomore campaign, Charge It finished a game second to White Abarrio in his stakes debut in the Florida Derby (G1)  at Gulfstream Park, which propelled him to a start in the Kentucky Derby (G1) five weeks later. He finished 17th-of-20 in the Kentucky Derby, but made amends next out with a 23-length conquest of the Dwyer (G3) at Belmont Park, which garnered a career-high 111 Beyer.

“He's a horse that's always trained really strongly and shown hints that he's capable to run a big race,” Pletcher noted. “His Dwyer was brilliant. His Suburban, I thought, was his most professional race. He's starting to put it all together consistently. It's a very tall order going up against the best older horses in training, but we're happy with the way he's coming into it.”

Charge It is out of the Indian Charlie mare I'll Take Charge, whose Grade 1-winning and producing dam Take Charge Lady was the mother of 2013 Champion 3-Year-Old Colt Will Take Charge, Grade 1-winner Take Charge Indy and Charming – the dam of Grade 1-winning millionaire Omaha Beach and 2014 Champion 2-Year-Old Filly Take Charge Brandi.

Gary and Mary West's Grade 1-winning Kentucky homebred West Will Power worked five-eighths in 1:02.24 in company with stakes-placed Tapit Shoes over the Oklahoma training track Saturday with an eye toward the Whitney.

Trained by Brad Cox and piloted through the breeze by Flavien Prat, the 6-year-old Bernardini horse worked to the outside of his sophomore stablemate, who was last seen finishing ninth in the Belmont Stakes (G1).

“It was good. They broke off a little slow, but finished up and galloped out great,” Cox said of the 5:40 a.m. (ET) breeze. “He always gallops out well – that's the best part of his works each week.”

Cox said West Will Power, last-out winner of the Stephen Foster (G1) on July 1 at Ellis Park, is not definite for the nine-furlong Whitney as of yet and that the millionaire multiple graded stakes winner could also come under consideration for the  1/1/4-mile, $1-million Jockey Club Gold Cup on September 2 at the Spa. Both the Whitney and Jockey Club Gold Cup offer a “Win and You're In” berth to the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) in November at Santa Anita Park.

“It's a very prestigious race. It means a lot,” said Cox, regarding the Whitney. “We'll see how things unfold after this work and make a decision a little bit later. We'll speak with the West team and come up with a plan.

“We could come back here a mile and a quarter. I've always thought that might be something he wants to do,” Cox continued. “I'm just going to continue to watch him and make sure he's on top of his game.”

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