Evvie Jets Denies Favorite Technical Analysis With Wire-To-Wire Perfect Sting Win

The Estate of Robert J. Amendola's graded stakes winner Evvie Jets led every step of the way to notch her third career stakes triumph in Sunday's $150,000 Perfect Sting, a one-mile Widener turf test for older fillies and mares, at Belmont Park.

Trained by Mertkan Kantarmaci and piloted to victory by Javier Castellano, Evvie Jets stayed well in command throughout to land a half-length triumph over pace-pressing post-time favorite Technical Analysis, who, along with Haughty and Customer List, was part of a formidable triad for conditioner Chad Brown. It was Evvie Jets' second win in three starts this year, adding to another stakes score in the Plenty of Grace in April at Aqueduct Racetrack.

“Unbelievable. She just has so much heart,” said Michael Amendola, son of Evvie Jets' late owner Robert Amendola. “Put her toe to toe with anybody and she fights on. It's a true test of her being a great racehorse. We have so much trust in her and we were excited to have Javier aboard today. She's been training great and we had her in a great spot. It was a nice surprise, but it wasn't a surprise.”

Away from the outermost post 5 at odds of 8-1, Evvie Jets broke sharpest of all with Technical Analysis ranging up to her inside to stay within striking range while Customer List broke a step slow and trailed through an opening quarter-mile in 23.36 seconds over the firm footing.

Technical Analysis, with Jose Ortiz in the irons, preserved her inside stalking position down the backstretch with stablemate Haughty giving chase on the outside as the half-mile elapsed in :46.77. Ortiz angled Technical Analysis to the outside of her pacesetting foe approaching the turn to take dead aim at Evvie Jets with Haughty going widest of all under Flavien Prat.

Castellano shook the reins approaching the top of the lane and Evvie Jets responded, finding another gear as Technical Analysis came within a half-length at the eighth pole but was in an all-out drive and unable to make up further ground. A valiant Evvie Jets had enough left in the end to stave off her rival and cross the wire first in a final time of 1:33.99, returning $19.60 for a $2 win ticket.

Haughty kept on for show honors as the late-running Tic Tic Tic Boom completed the superfecta. Customer List, who flattened out after a brief bid in the turn, completed the order of finish.

Kantarmaci, who won his third race of the Belmont spring/summer meet, said he was confident Evvie Jets could take on the trio of Chad Brown trainees.

“I see that Chad's three horses were really strong competition for today, but we were at our best distance and we knew she was going to make her race,” Kantarmaci said. “The rival doesn't always run each race the same race – you need to run against them and if you make your race, you can beat them. She did her race.”

Although Evvie Jets has shown proficiency both on and off the pace, Kantarmaci said it was a wise decision by Castellano to take charge when Technical Analysis did not.

“I think this is the right move because she gets more comfortable on the lead and she has the ability to answer,” said Kantarmaci. “If the pace is slowed down already, she has the ability to give the second kick instead of the waiting horses make the kick.”

Castellano, who scored his second stake this weekend and fourth of the meet, said it was Evvie Jets' race to lose once she made the lead.

“These are the types of races that you have to use the best judgement,” said Castellano. “They [Technical Analysis] had speed and I had speed. I could either be aggressive and try to win the race, or be conservative and maybe get second or third. I tried to play the break and I didn't see anyone taking the lead, so I took it myself to dictate the pace. My horse loved it. The way she did it, you can see the fractions were easy and she was traveling really well. Turning for home, when I asked her, she responded really well.”

Bred in Kentucky by Farfellow Farms, Evvie Jets, a 5-year-old Twirling Candy mare, attained graded stakes glory when taking the Grade 3 Noble Damsel in October at Belmont at the Big A, which provided Kantarmaci with his first graded victory as a trainer. She boasts a record of 20-6-6-2 and banked $82,500 for her latest victory, increasing her lifetime bankroll to $531,655.

Bred in Kentucky by Farfellow Farms, Evvie Jets is out of the Consolidator mare Natchez Trace. Offered by Hidden Brook, she was a $75,000 Keeneland September yearling sale purchase by Team D in 2019.

Kantarmaci said potential targets for Evvie Jets could include the 1 1/16-mile, $300,000 Ballston Spa (G2) on August 24 at Saratoga Race Course, or the one-mile First Lady (G1) on October 7 at Keeneland.

“I think we should keep her in New York, in her own barn in her own home where she trains,” Kantarmaci said. “If she's really doing good, we look a little more higher levels with her. We go by distance first. Let's see what she shows in a couple weeks and go from there.”

Ortiz praised the runner-up effort from multiple graded stakes winner Technical Analysis, who made her first start off a nearly nine-month layoff.

“Usually, Chad has them pretty ready to go off the layoff and my filly ran a great race,” Ortiz said. “I thought the winner ran a great race, too. We went pretty fast down the backside.”

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Stylish Maiden Winner Northern Invader To Target Spa’s Hall Of Fame Stakes

West Point Thoroughbreds and David Ingordo's Northern Invader, a sophomore son of Collected, drew off to an impressive eight-length score on Saturday in a one-mile maiden special weight for 3-year-olds and up over the Widener turf at Belmont Park

Trained by Cherie DeVaux and piloted by John Velazquez, Northern Invader bobbled at the break and settled in fourth position before making a three-wide move on the turn and taking a four-length lead at the stretch call. The talented chestnut kicked away in the final furlong under a strong hand ride to secure the win in a final time of 1:33.76 and garner a career-best 94 Beyer Speed Figure.

Northern Invader, bred in Ontario by Anderson Farms Ont. Inc. and Peter A. Berglar Racing Interests, made his first two starts on dirt at Churchill Downs, completing the exacta on both occasions, in May and June.

DeVaux said she was cautiously optimistic of a good effort from Northern Invader in his turf debut.

“He's exciting for sure. The first two races we were trying to see if we should pursue going on the dirt. We always had a feeling he was a turf horse, but he had been training so well on the dirt,” said DeVaux, who secured her first win at Belmont Park. “There's always some apprehension. The two races he ran on the dirt were really solid and the speed figures came back quite fast, so you're just hoping you make the right decision with the surface change.”

DeVaux said Northern Invader is likely to target the $500,000 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame (G2) at one-mile on turf for sophomores on August 4 at Saratoga Race Course rather than try for a Canadian classic win in the $1-million King's Plate, a 10-furlong Tapeta test restricted to Canadian-breds on August 20 at Woodbine Racetrack.

“Right now, I think we'll stay the course on the turf and maybe try the Hall of Fame. Just see how he's training out of this and go from there,” DeVaux said. “It's a big jump to go from a mile to that [10 furlongs], so we'll just have to see how he progresses in his training.”

The well-bred $310,000 OBS March Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training purchase is out of the winning Arch mare Androeah, who is a full-sister to Grade 1-winner Archarcharch.

DeVaux credited Northern Invader's breeders, who also found success this meet with the sophomore Ontario-bred Kalik, who captured the Pennine Ridge (G2) in June at Belmont and is targeting Saturday's $750,000 Belmont Derby Invitational (G1).

“They both do an excellent job with anything they have their hand in,” said DeVaux of Anderson and Berglar. “They're family friends of ours and both do a really good job in their matings and how the horses are raised. My husband [Ingordo] bought [Grade 1 winner] Hard Not to Love off of Dave Anderson — he has a great breeding program up there.”

Northern Invader, who shipped upstate to Saratoga this morning, was saddled on Saturday by DeVaux's sister and assistant trainer, Adrianne DeVaux, who visited with the budding star when he was a yearling.

“She was actually playing with him in the field and he was chasing her around. He wouldn't leave her alone, so the joke was always that he chose her. She's very attached to him,” DeVaux said, with a laugh.

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‘Keeping Some Options Open’: Kingsbarns Still Possible For Either Jim Dandy, Haskell

Graded stakes winner and Kentucky Derby (G1) alumnus Kingsbarns remains a possibility for either the $500,000 Jim Dandy (G2) on July 29 at Saratoga Race Course or the previous week's $1-million TVG.com Haskell (G1) at Monmouth Park, Spendthrift Farm General Manager Ned Toffey said.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, Kingsbarns was narrowly defeated by Salute the Stars in the last-out Pegasus on June 17 at Monmouth after running 14th in the Kentucky Derby on May 6 at Churchill Downs. The son of Uncle Mo captured his first three starts heading into the Kentucky Derby, including the Louisiana Derby (G2) on March 25 Fair Grounds.

“We're freshening him a little bit, keeping some options open,” Toffey said. “There's the Haskell and the Jim Dandy, and we'll look at those, but we'll talk with Todd and just keep things open. Obviously, it gets pretty tough with fewer spots for these good 3-year-olds. You won't find too many soft spots. We still think he's a nice horse and he should move forward off his last race.”

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Auguste Rodin Completes Derby Double At The Curragh In Landmark Classic Win For O’Brien

Trainer Aidan O'Brien landed his 100th European classic triumph on Sunday when Epsom Derby (G1) hero Auguste Rodin won the Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby (G1) at the Curragh, securing the coveted classic double.

Coolmore partners and Westerberg's 4-11 favorite Auguste Rodin is O'Brien's fifth Epsom Derby/Irish Derby winner, joining Galileo (2001), High Chaparral (2002), Camelot (2012), and Australia (2016) on the list of just 19 overall to accomplish the feat. He is the first since the Aga Khan's Harzand in 2016 to complete the double.

Third in the early running under Ryan Moore, the Irish-bred Deep Impact colt drew alongside pacesetter Adelaide River, sent off at 33-1, in the straight before asserting himself in the closing strides in a thrilling finish. He crossed the finish line a 1½-length winner and provided Moore his first Irish Derby success.

Convent Garden, 80-1, finished third, 2¼ lengths behind Adelaide River, who held on for second, and Peking Opera, 66-1, was fourth in a 1-2-3-4 finish for the powerhouse team of Coolmore and O'Brien's Ballydoyle.

Time for the 1 1/2 miles was 2:33.24 on turf rated as good.

Victory celebrations were dampened, however, by the fatal breakdown just before the home turn by the connections' San Antonio, a stakes-winning Dubawi colt ridden by Wayne Lordan, who hit the ground hard and was taken to Tallaght Hospital in Dublin for tests, the Independent.ie reports.

“It's terrible for San Antonio,” O'Brien told Racing TV. “When things go wrong in any sport after going 75 percent of the way and the pressure is really going on, that's when devastating stuff can happen and it does happen.

“Thank God Wayne is OK, but it's terrible for San Antonio and we're so sorry for everyone – that lads that looked after him and rode him and did everything with him.”

Coolmore bred Auguste Rodin, a son of Japan's 2005 Triple Crown winner and great sire Deep Impact out of the Galileo mare Rhododendron, a three-time Group 1 winner, who finished a gallant second in the 2017 Epsom Oaks (G1).

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