More Than Ready, It’s Pletcher’s Time

For at least a decade, there were no “if” or “when” questions about Todd Pletcher and the Hall of Fame.

If? By the time he won the GI Kentucky Derby for the first time with Super Saver in 2010, Pletcher, then a month away from his 43rd birthday, already had nine champions, four Eclipse Awards as outstanding trainer, four national money-earned titles, had topped the Saratoga trainers table six times and had earned the Gulfstream Park training title for the seventh consecutive year. Super Saver's Derby triumph was his 72nd Grade I victory.

When? With that remarkable resume in place halfway through his 15th season as a trainer, Pletcher already was a lock to be elected to the Hall of Fame at the National Museum of Racing. It just became a matter of time for him to become eligible in 2021, meeting the Hall of Fame requirement of 25 years as a licensed trainer.

As a result, the announcement in May of the first-time-on-the-ballot elections of Pletcher and 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah might rank as the biggest non-story in racing this decade.

Pletcher, 54, will be formally inducted during the annual Hall of Fame ceremony Friday morning at Fasig-Tipton's Humphrey S. Finney Sales Pavilion. Since the 2020 ceremony was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hall of Fame classes from both years–a total of seven people and three horses–will be inducted and honored. Pletcher will be the final inductee on the stage and said that he will deliver an acceptance speech that will last between six and seven minutes. If Pletcher's attention-to-detail past is prologue, he will hit the mark.

Pletcher with his father, JJ | Joe DiOrio

While he grew up in a racing family based in Texas, graduated from the University of Arizona's Racetrack Industry Program and was promptly hired by superstar trainer D. Wayne Lukas, Pletcher said the Hall of Fame was not something he aimed for in his youth.

“I never thought about the possibility of that happening,” he said. “Once things start going well you're aware of it. Certainly, having worked for Wayne while he was inducted, I was aware of that. But I didn't start off thinking that's my goal.

“The goals that we try to, as a team, put in place are pretty simple. We try to do the best job we can with each and every opportunity we get with each and every horse. In some cases that's winning a maiden New York-bred or a claiming race or whatever.”

That approach quickly carried Pletcher to the top of sport and ultimately to the Hall of Fame. He became racing's career leader in purse money earned in May 2014 when he passed Lukas with Jack Milton's victory in the Poker at Belmont. In September 2015 Pletcher became the first trainer to crack $300 million in earnings. He led the way to $400 million on January 30.

Since his father Jake trained Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses in the Southwest, horses and racing have always been a part of Pletcher's life. He began helping his father when he was in elementary school.

“I knew early on that I wanted to train horses. The only time there was any question was just when I was going to do it,” he said. “I wanted to go to work right after high school and both of my parents felt very strongly that they wanted me to go to college. The one compromise that we made was that I go get a college education. I'm glad I did. It was a fun four years of my life.”

Thanks to his father's involvement in racing, Pletcher had summer jobs in high school and college with top trainers Henry Moreno, Charlie Whittingham and Lukas. In December 1988, during senior year in college, Pletcher met with Lukas. At that point, Lukas was operating a huge national stable with divisions being managed by his son Jeff and other talented young assistants, including Randy Bradshaw, Kiaran McLaughlin, Mark Hennig and Dallas Stewart.

More Than Ready, the first of Pletcher's top runners to find prominence as a sire | Horsephotos

“I sort of had an informal interview with Wayne at Santa Anita,” he said. “He told me I could count on a job, to give him a call when I graduated and he would tell me where to go. When I did that he said go to Belmont. Part of what was so great about that was going to work, not only for Wayne, but Jeff, who was the assistant for half a year and Kiaran was an assistant for the other half. I got to work under those two guys.

“Jeff was a huge influence. He was a pretty strict disciplinarian, but he was a good coach. He expected things done a certain way. I think learning under him was important. And then the other half of the year working with Kiaran, I got to work with two guys, very different personalities, that were both very talented horseman. It was a really good balance for me.”

Pletcher has said through the years that being hired by Lukas was important to the development of his career.

“It was such a great learning environment, to not only being exposed to so many good horses, but seeing the organization itself and how that operated,” he said. “Plus, by being in a larger organization, you were able to get some additional responsibility that you might not in a smaller barn.”

Lukas said that it was clear from the beginning that Pletcher was a good fit for his stable.

“He started out right. He had a very strong work ethic and he had a great attention to detail,” Lukas said. “One of the things that we impart to those guys is attention to detail and organization. We organize the barn. That comes from my coaching background probably, but we organize the barn. He adapted to that and fell into that very quickly and became very, very strong.”

In 1991, Pletcher was promoted to assistant trainer. He stayed on with Lukas, managing barns in New York and Florida until late in 1995 when, at the age of 28, he took out a license to open his own stable.

“It was very difficult to leave,” he said. “You're walking away from a tremendous assistant job. You're working around the best horses in the country. To leave that and open up a stable where I had seven horses, none of which had ever won a race; it was intimidating to leave that but for me it felt like it was time to. If you're ever going to do it, you just got to do it.

Pletcher and Lukas in 2006 | Horsephotos

“Sometimes as an assistant, you kind of think the phone's going to ring one day and 'Hey, you've got 20 horses that I want you to train.' I think after a little while you realize that you've just got to get out there and try to do it yourself and see if you can succeed. I talked to my parents a lot about it, to my wife a lot about it and we decided it was. Let's give it a shot.”

Pletcher's first career starter, Paramount, finished sixth of 12 on Jan. 13, 1996, at Gulfstream Park. Thirteen days later, Pletcher won with his second runner, Majestic Number, in a maiden claimer race for 3-year-old fillies. Jerry Bailey, who had been Pletcher's babysitter on occasion years before when he prepping for what turned into a career as a Hall of Fame jockey and whose father was Pletcher's dentist, was up for that important first victory.

In July 1996 at Monmouth he picked up his first stakes win with Stu's Choice in the $40,000 John McSorley. The first graded stakes win came in 1998, the year that the 31-year-old won the first of his 14 Saratoga titles. According to Equibase, through Sunday, Aug. 1, Pletcher was seventh in career wins with 5,155 and his $409,890,881 in career earnings was more than $48 million clear of runner-up Steve Asmussen. Pletcher's website shows a total of 1,328 stakes won by his runners. That list of stakes includes two Derby wins; three in the GI Belmont S.; four GI Kentucky Oaks; six GI Florida Derbys; three in the GI Whitney and two GI Travers. He has won a total of 11 Breeders' Cup races in nine divisions. Many of his top horses have been ridden by Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez in a longstanding partnership.

Pletcher said that the filly Jersey Girl and More Than Ready, who won of a total of 13 stakes between them from 1997 to 2000 were the horses that put him on the map. His legacy, he said, is likely to be the colts that raced for him and went on to become prominent stallions, starting with More Than Ready. When it is posed, Pletcher gently pushes away an obvious question on the eve of his Hall of Fame induction: does he have a favorite horse?

Pletcher got his first Classic win with Rags to Riches | Horsephotos

“No, and I try to avoid that,” he said. “I've always said the most excited I've ever been after a race was when Rags to Riches won the Belmont (2007). That's still holds true for a lot of reasons. One, just the enormity of a filly winning a Belmont. But the fashion that it happened when she stumbled at the start and the stretch-long duel (with Preakness winner Curlin). My first Classic win and Johnny's first Classic win. It was just so much to be excited about.

“As far as all-time favorites, I've been blessed to have a lot of good ones.”

Like Lukas and other prominent horsemen who found early success and established their Hall of Fame credentials, Pletcher had to wait until he reached his year of eligibility to be placed on the ballot. Lukas said Pletcher had made his mark long ago.

“His career, exemplifies so much perfection, so many good things,” Lukas  said. “That's what it's all about. He's why we put people in the Hall of Fame when they have the character and work ethic and achievements that he's put together. That's why we get guys in. I'm glad to welcome him to our fraternity.”

Pletcher's wife Tracy, their three children and his parents will be part of the group of about 15 family members that will attend the induction. Typically composed in victory and defeat, Pletcher said he's not sure how he will react when it's his turn to be inducted.

“Everyone that I've talked to said yes, be prepared to be emotional,” he said. “Hopefully I can hold it together, say the right things. I'm going to be careful about naming too many individuals because I fear leaving someone out.”

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Two Fresh Forces For The Next Cycle

Every year, like the fireflies, they emerge with the gathering heat of summer. Even as the more established sophomores hobble out of the Triple Crown series–many requiring rest or recuperation, some even menaced by retirement–a second wave reliably reinvigorates the crop. Sure enough, in recent days a couple of new names have volunteered themselves to test the resilience of those Classic protagonists who do persevere to Saratoga and beyond.

But while both share a fresh, progressive profile, in other respects they could scarcely be more different. 'TDN Rising Star' First Captain (Curlin), winner of the GIII Dwyer S. on his stakes debut Monday, is beginning to live up to his onerous billing as a $1.5 million Fasig-Tipton Saratoga joint sale-topper by one of the world's leading stallions. In contrast Masqueparade, who won the GIII Ohio Derby the previous weekend, belongs to the very first crop of Upstart, an aptly named $10,000 foil at Airdrie to Hill 'n' Dale's $175,000 veteran.

If anything, First Captain's pedigree has become even more aristocratic since his presentation by one of the greatest of our horsemen, Arthur Hancock of Stone Farm, at the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion in 2019. For he represents a celebrated dynasty already refreshed this year not only by GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S. winner Greatest Honour (Tapit), but also by the 4-year-old Cezanne, another son of Curlin to have vindicated the top price at an elite sale. (Though it must be acknowledged that the $3.65 million Gulfstream 2-year-old has again evinced his fragility since that stunning return in the GIII Kona Gold S.).

Greatest Honour, Cezanne and First Captain all trace their ancestry to the matriarch Blush With Pride (Blushing Groom {Fr}), the GI Kentucky Oaks winner of 1982 whose daughter Better Than Honour (Deputy Minister) famously produced consecutive winners of the GI Belmont S.–Jazil (Seeking the Gold, 2006) and Rags to Riches (A.P. Indy, 2007). Both Greatest Honour and Cezanne do so through Better Than Honour herself, as second and third dam, respectively; but First Captain's mother, the Grade III winner America (A.P. Indy), is a granddaughter of Better Than Honour's half-sister Butterfly Blue (Ire) (Sadler's Wells).

It is remarkable to remind ourselves now that Blush With Pride was cashed in at the age of 18, for $635,000 at the Keeneland November Sale of 1997. At that stage, Better Than Honour was still only a yearling, but John Magnier and his partners in Coolmore–as so often–were ahead of the game even with an ageing mare who had appeared to make patchy use of her opportunities. By the time Better Than Honour had developed into an excellent track performer, and then an even better broodmare, Blush With Pride had closed out her own breeding career in Ireland with four foals by Coolmore's champion sire Sadler's Wells.

The first of these turned out to be the Group 1-placed juvenile Maryinsky (Ire), who later produced elite runners in Peeping Fawn (Danehill) and Thewayyouare (Kingmambo). And the next was Butterfly Blue (Ire), who only broke her maiden on the final of nine starts (albeit highly tried on occasion) for Aidan O'Brien and was culled with a maiden cover by Fasliyev, a precocious sprinter by Nureyev, for $610,000 to Horse France at Keeneland November in 2004.

The filly she was carrying that day was sold in the same ring 12 months later, for $290,000, to the late Jim Sapara of Winsong Farm. And it was only a couple of weeks after this filly, meanwhile named Lacadena, had added a stakes placing to her debut success at Woodbine in 2007 that her dam's half-sister was credited with her second Belmont success.

Her family tree having duly obtained a historic new distinction, Lacadena failed to meet her reserve at $1.4 million at Keeneland that November. Nonetheless, she resurfaced the following year in the silks of Bobby Flay, and though unable to win in a light sophomore campaign, she would prove a fertile investment.

Most obviously, when returned to Keeneland in 2015 to realize $1.3 million from Heider Family Stables. In the meantime, however, she had produced two significant daughters. One, Paris Bikini (Bernardini), brought $425,000 on finishing a mildly successful track career–only to work a big profit for WinStar last year when sold to Katsumi Yoshida for $1.95 million at Fasig-Tipton last November, her homebred daughter Paris Lights (Curlin) having won the GI Coaching Club American Oaks.

The other high achiever bred by Flay from Lacadena was America, the dam of First Captain. She was boldly retained at $725,000 as a Keeneland September yearling, a gamble that paid off fairly handsomely. For a start, she proved a productive performer for Bill Mott, winning five of 22 starts and adding podiums in the GI Mother Goose S. and GI Delaware H. to success in the GIII Turnback the Alarm H. And she was then, very presciently, mated with the sire of Paris Lights just days after that filly was foaled. The result is First Captain, who topped the Saratoga Sale just weeks before she was offered with an Uncle Mo cover at Fasig-Tipton in November 2019. Once again, the reserve was both ambitious–she was retained at $3.1 million–

and astute. Her half-sister, remember, would only be exalted by the rise of Paris Lights the following year.

The docket for her Curlin colt had been signed in as many as seven different names, but that of Flay himself has meanwhile resurfaced alongside three of them–West Point Thoroughbreds, Siena Farm and Woodford Racing–in the partnership registered behind First Captain for his belated, but immaculate start for Shug McGaughey. After beating a next-out 'Rising Star' Mahaamel (Into Mischief) over seven furlongs in April, he graduated to an allowance score over a mile of slop before landing the odds, albeit not in the most flamboyant fashion, by reeling in a front-runner in the Dwyer. In fairness, he was forced wide entering the stretch and a second turn will doubtless tell us more about the feasibility of the GI Runhappy Travers S.

Given his trainer's admirable circumspection, the Curlin S. may well appeal not just for its aptness, but also as a less-searching rehearsal than the GII Jim Dandy S. Whatever happens, he will surely keep progressing. Even at the most elementary level, you would expect a Curlin colt out of an A.P. Indy mare to flourish with maturity and distance; and the anterior intervention of Sadler's Wells in one of the modern breed's landmark Classic families can only serve that orientation.

A.P. Influence Behind the 'Masque'…

A.P. Indy is also a significant presence behind Masqueparade, who is by a grandson and whose damsire is out of one of his daughters. This is a different kind of slow burn. Whereas First Captain was late on the scene, but landed running, Masqueparade did get onto the track at two (albeit only just) but then required four attempts round the Fair Grounds to break his maiden. With those foundations laid, however, he proved a revelation when Al Stall Jr. brought him up to Churchill, winning an allowance on the Derby undercard by just shy of a dozen lengths; and he then consolidated that breakthrough by seeing off some quite accomplished rivals at Thistledown.

I do like the antecedents of this horse, who represents not only a model barn, but also one of the most exemplary programs in the Bluegrass, having been bred by Brereton C. Jones in support of Upstart's debut at Airdrie Stud. (A $100,000 weanling pinhook, he made $180,000 from FTGGG as a yearling.) Masqueparade's dam, Cry War Eagle (Any Given Saturday), was recruited to the farm on her retirement for just $40,000 at Keeneland January 2015. It says plenty about our strange industry that her value as a weanling had depreciated so steeply–she had changed hands for $170,000 in the same ring-despite winning five of 20 starts in the meantime.

That record was sewn from hardy genetic reserves: her half-brother Actin Good (Yes It's True) was a stakes winner or graded stakes-placed in four consecutive seasons, including the GIII Pegasus S. among five wins in 25 starts overall. And their dam was a half-sister to Voice Of Destiny (Mane Minister), teak winner of 24 races (including a couple of graded stakes) between the ages of two and 10! Moreover, the next dam is an Alysheba half-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Sprint winner Very Subtle (Hoist the Silver) plus another brisk one in Schematic (Upper Mile), whose respective win tallies ended up 12-for-29 and eight-for-15.

We can rely on Airdrie to draw out such wholesome ingredients not just in their broodmare band, but also in their stallion roster. Sure enough, Upstart was Grade I-placed at two, three and four, besides thrashing Frosted by five and a half lengths in the GII Lambholm South Holy Bull S.

How very auspicious, then, that Upstart should have made such a businesslike start with his first juveniles last year. Reinvestment Risk romped in an early maiden Saratoga to become a 'Rising Star' before twice chasing home speedball Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) at Grade I level, while only the runaway train Not This Time mustered more freshman winners. Consistent with his own track profile, Upstart is now maintaining that momentum in a second campaign where only the eccentric case of Protonico deprives him of the highest earnings-per-named-foal among active Kentucky stallions in this intake.

In the meantime, moreover, he was again in conspicuous demand at the 2-year-old sales, advancing what was already a good yield for his second crop of yearlings (his $45,159 average held up well against fee, not least in a pandemic market and while rehousing as many as 41 out of 47 into the ring) as high as $113,250. Moreover, he has already bucked the usual trend, his first yearlings having been received so warmly (average $63,608) that his fourth book, a notoriously challenging one for most sires, went right back up to 90 after taking the customary slide from 146 to 86 and then just 38.

Both as a runner and a sire, Upstart has introduced more precocity than we associate with the Flatter brand. But remember how another son of Flatter, West Coast, is one of the best recent examples of the type of late-on-the-scene sophomore under discussion. (Though credited with beating all three Classic winners in his Travers, it would be churlish to pretend that they had made it to Saratoga in the same kind of form). So don't be surprised to see Upstart consolidate from here.

Other new names will doubtless emerge to challenge those who have absorbed the grueling Triple Crown trail, though Mr. Wireless (Dialed In) tore up the script prepared for odds-on Fulsome (Into Mischief) in the GIII Indiana Derby Wednesday. Remarkably, the breeders of Mr. Wireless, John and Iveta Kerber, had also been responsible for Iowa Derby winner Stilleto Boy (Shackleford) just five days previously. The Kerbers remain involved in Stilleto Boy and will be hoping to secure due reward for this notable achievement when he enters the ring at Fasig Tipton next week as hip 557 at the Horses of Racing Age Sale.

Not all of these later developers, of course, will cope with the raising of the bar. Some, like those fireflies, will fade away as shyly as they have emerged. But one or two, perhaps, will discover a glow that endures even until mirrored by the Pacific sunset at the Breeders' Cup in November.

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Velazquez To Ride Preakness Winner Rombauer In Belmont Stakes

Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez will ride John and Diane Fradkin's Grade 1 Preakness Stakes winner Rombauer in the G1 Belmont Stakes on June 5, replacing Flavien Prat, who rode the Twirling Candy colt to victory in the Triple Crown's middle leg but committed to ride G1 Kentucky Derby third-place finisher Hot Rod Charlie in the 1 1/2-mile Test of the Champion at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. The news was first reported by Daily Racing Form.

Velazquez rode Medina Spirit to a first-place finish in the Kentucky Derby and finished third aboard the Protonico colt in the Preakness, but Medina Spirit will not run in the Belmont. Following Medina Spirit's defeat in the Preakness and more than a week after the colt's trainer, Bob Baffert, revealed that he was notified of a positive drug test from the Derby, New York Racing Association officials said they would not accept any entries from Baffert or allow his horses to stable at NYRA tracks indefinitely. A stewards' hearing can not be held in Kentucky until results of a split sample test is received by officials there.

Velazquez was also the regular rider of G1 Kentucky Oaks winner Malathaat, who was briefly under consideration for a try against colts in the Belmont. However, her connections announced last week she would not contest the Triple Crown's final leg.

If Rombauer contests the Belmont, this will be the 19th consecutive year Velazquez has a mount in the race. He's won twice – with the filly Rags to Riches in 2007 and 2012 with Union Rags – from 24 Belmont Stakes starts dating back to 1995.

 

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Belmont Stakes Under Consideration for Malathaat

Malathaat (Curlin), the undefeated filly who is coming off a win in the GI Longines Kentucky Oaks, could go next in the June 5 GI Belmont S.

“It has crossed our minds,” Shadwell Farms Vice President and General Manager Rick Nichols said of the Belmont. “One issue would be whether or not we could get John Velazquez. If Medina Spirit (Protonico) wins the [GI] Preakness Stakes., obviously John will have to choose him for the Belmont. No one would blame him for choosing that horse.”

Nichols said a final decision will be made in “about a week.”

“We'll talk some more about it and talk with Sheikh Hamdan's family and get their input,” Nichols said

The filly's trainer, Todd Pletcher, is no stranger to the Kentucky Oaks-Belmont route. In 2007, Pletcher went in the Belmont with Rags to Riches (A.P. Indy) after winning the Oaks. She is the last filly to win the Belmont and was the first to do so since 1905. Three fillies have won the Belmont.

Nichols admitted that there are not a lot of options right now for Malathaat against fillies. She will pass the GII Black-Eyed Susan S. at Pimlico. The Belmont Stakes card includes the GI Acorn S. for 3-year-old fillies, but the race is at one-mile around one turn and is not a good fit for the filly. The next Grade I race around two turns for 3-year-old fillies is the July 24 GI Coaching Club American Oaks at Saratoga.

“The further they go the better,” Nichols said. “There are not a lot of good choices for her. We could go in the [GII] Mother Goose Stakes, but it's only a Grade II race.”

Nichols said Malathaat returned to the track Thursday morning and galloped for Pletcher.

“Told loves her. He absolutely loves her,” Nichols said. “She's such a sweet filly around the barn. She's got so much class and has everything you'd want in a top filly.”

Malathaat kicked off her 3-year-old campaign with a win in the GI Central Bank Ashland and followed that up with a hard fought win over Search Results (Flatter) in the Oaks. A $1,050,000 purchase at Keeneland September, Malathaat is five-for-five lifetime.

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