National Treasure, Red Route One Work for Belmont

GI Preakness S. winner National Treasure (Quality Road) worked five furlongs in :59.55 seconds over Belmont Park's main track on Monday in preparation for Saturday's $1.5 million GI Belmont S. With exercise rider Erick Garcia aboard, the colt galloped out six furlongs in 1:11.20 and seven furlongs in 1:25.20.

“He worked very well this morning,” trainer Bob Baffert's assistant, Jimmy Barnes, said. “It's a big track and you can find yourself lost out there. Erick did an excellent job working him and now we're just waiting for the race.”

National Treasure is owned by the partnership of SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Robert Masterson, Stonestreet Stables, Jay Schoenfarber, Waves Edge Capital and Catherine Donovan. Hall of Famer John Velazquez will be aboard for the 1 1/2-mile Classic.

Also working Monday was Winchell Thoroughbreds' Red Route One (Gun Runner), who posted a half-mile in :50.20 over Belmont Park's training track. The colt most recently finished fourth behind National Treasure in the Preakness.

“I thought he went beautiful,” Toby Sheets, trainer Steve Asmussen's Belmont-based assistant, said. “It was nice and fluid and he came back with good energy. I'm very happy with him. We wanted to be out on the track before it got really busy. He's doing everything right and I have no complaints.”

Raise Cain (Violence), winner of the GIII Gotham S. and most recently eighth in the GI Kentucky Derby will skip the Belmont, trainer Ben Colebrook confirmed Monday. The colt will instead go postward the following day in the GIII Matt Winn S., which was originally scheduled to be run at Churchill Downs, but will now be run at Ellis Park.

“It shifted to Ellis and the distance changed to a mile and an eighth…That kind of moved the needle,” Colebrook explained.

Post positions for the 155th Belmont will be drawn Tuesday morning at 11:05 a.m. ET.

Post positions for the 155th Belmont will be drawn Tuesday morning at 11:05 a.m. ET.

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Southlawn Upsets Fair Grounds Oaks

Southlawn (f, 3, Pioneerof the Nile–Mo d'Amour, by Uncle Mo), a runaway, eight-length optional claiming winner at Fair Grounds with first-time Lasix in her sophomore debut Feb. 17, ran back to that effort in a big way to upset Saturday's GII Fair Grounds Oaks.

Drawn on the fence, the 7-1 chance trailed the field of five heading into the clubhouse turn. Southlawn traveled nicely in an inside fourth down the backstretch and set her sights on the top two as they straightened.

Last out GII Rachel Alexandra S. heroine and 'TDN Rising Star' Pretty Mischievous (Into Mischief) took over from favored Hoosier Philly (Into Mischief) and looked well on her way as they straightened, but Southlawn was just winding up. Tipped out into the clear, Southlawn came rolling over the top to win going away by 3 1/4 lengths. Pretty Mischievous was second; The Alys Look (Connect) was third.

Southlawn, fifth as the favorite behind champion Wonder Wheel (Into Mischief) going 5 1/2 furlongs on debut at Churchill June 3, was a five-length maiden winner going a mile at second asking with blinkers added in an Ellis off-the-turfer July 31. Thrown right into the deep end, she was a well-beaten seventh in the GIII Pocahontas S. at Churchill Sept. 17. Switched to grass facing allowance company in her next two, she was off the board on both occasions, finishing ninth at Keeneland Oct. 28 and fifth in her juvenile finale at Churchill Nov. 20.

Pedigree Notes:

Southlawn, a $290,000 KEESEP yearling, becomes the 25th graded/48th stakes winner for the late Pioneerof the Nile. Broodmare sire Uncle Mo is now responsible for four graded winners and 11 stakes winners. SW & MGSP Mo d'Amour, a half-sister to MGSP Colonial Creed (Jimmy Creed), is also represented by a Quality Road colt of 2021 ($300,000 KEESEP yearling) and a Constitution colt of this year. Mo d'Amour, a $22,000 KEESEP yearling and $75,000 OBSMAR juvenile, outran her 37-1 odds to finish fifth in the 2016 GI Kentucky Oaks. She carried the colors of WinStar for her 4-year-old campaign after being purchased privately from King of Prussia Stable.

Saturday, Fair Grounds
FAIR GROUNDS OAKS PRESENTED BY FASIG-TIPTON-GII, $376,000, Fair Grounds, 3-25, 3yo, f, 1 1/16m, 1:44.38, ft.
1–SOUTHLAWN, 122, f, 3, by Pioneerof the Nile
1st Dam: Mo d'Amour (SW & MGSP, $311,360), by Uncle Mo
                2nd Dam: Neverthesame, by Scat Daddy
                3rd Dam: Salut d'Amour (Ire), by Danehill Dancer (Ire)
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($290,000
Ylg '21 KEESEP). O-Robert E. Masterson; B-WinStar Farm, LLC
(KY); T-Norm W. Casse; J-Reylu Gutierrez. $240,000. Lifetime
Record: 7-3-0-0, $318,369. Werk Nick Rating: A+++.
*Triple Plus* Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Pretty Mischievous, 122, f, 3, Into Mischief–Pretty City
Dancer, by Tapit. O/B-Godolphin (KY); T-Brendan P. Walsh.
$80,000. 'TDN Rising Star'.
3–The Alys Look, 122, f, 3, Connect–Foul Play,
by Harlan's Holiday. 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. ($60,000 Ylg
'21 KEESEP). O-Ike and Dawn Thrash; B-G. Watts Humphrey
(KY); T-Brad H. Cox. $40,000.
Margins: 3 1/4, 3 3/4, 8 1/4. Odds: 7.70, 1.30, 4.40.
Also Ran: Hoosier Philly, Christian d'Oro.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Leading Ladies Inducted Into Hall of Fame

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – By far, the most enthusiastic applause during the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame induction ceremony Friday morning was for a video clip of race that everyone in the audience likely had seen many times.

Beholder's (Henny Hughes) career-capping victory by a nose over the previously unbeaten champion Songbird (Medaglia d'Oro) in the 2016 GI Breeder's Cup Distaff was nearly as gripping on the big screen at the Fasig-Tipton sales pavilion as it was live at Santa Anita Park. For sheer drama it ranks with the finish of the 1988 Distaff when Personal Ensign (Private Account) rallied to overtake Goodbye Halo (Halo) and GI Kentucky Derby winner Winning Colors (Caro) to complete her career unbeaten.

With a slew of impressive statistics, Beholder and the seven other members of the Class of 2022 joined Personal Ensign in the Hall of Fame, which fittingly is located across Union Ave. from historic Saratoga Race Course. Beholder and Tepin (Bernstein) were elected by Hall of Fame voters in the contemporary division; Hillsdale (Take Away), Royal Heroine (Ire) (Lypheor {GB}) and trainer Oscar White were selected by the Historic Review Committee; three were honored in the Pillar of the Turf category: James Cox Brady, Marshall Cassidy and James Ben Ali Haggin.

This year's event had a smaller crowd than usual, possibly because there were no contemporary trainers or jockeys inducted. All four of the people who received racing's highest honor for their distinguished careers, have been dead for decades. Haggin, a remarkable owner and breeder, who at one time owned 1,500 broodmares, was born 200 years ago.

Beholder, owned by the late B. Wayne Hughes' Spendthrift Farm and trained by Richard Mandella, completed her brilliant career with a record of 18-6-0 from 26 starts and earnings of $6,156,600. She was a four-time champion, won three Breeders' Cup races and a total of 11 Grade I races. She won at least one Grade I in each of her five seasons on the track.

“It's an amazing and humbling honor for us to see our greatest race-mare, our once-in-a-lifetime horse enshrined next to the many others that came before her,” said Eric Gustavson, Hughes's son-in-law and the president of Spendthrift. “Beholder is already in the Hall of Fame now, so what you're getting feels like I'm lobbying for her to get in.”

Gustavson cited some of the high points of Beholder's career and acknowledged by name the people who worked with her, starting with the breeders, Fred and Nancy Mitchell of Clarkland Farm. He said Mandella, who had to miss the ceremony because he had tested positive for Covid-19, deserved credit for Beholder's success, “for his masterful horsemanship, patience and judgment, and managing Beholder's incredible career. Thank you, Richard.”

“I once heard Richard say, 'I can't get out of the horses what God didn't put in,'” Gustavson said. “Well, thank you God for giving Beholder so much talent. And thank you Richard for getting it all out of her.”

As he began to talk about Hughes, who died in August 2021, Gustavson paused for nine seconds to regain his composure.

“You should be standing here right now instead of me,” Gustavson said. “And while we're sorry, he didn't get to see Beholder win her final honor. We take solace in remembering how much Beholder meant to Wayne. You see, Wayne never got too attached to his race horses. They meant a lot to him, but he just wasn't the type to allow his emotions to come along for the ride. Until Beholder that is. She changed him in that regard. Following Beholder's impressive win against the boys in the 2015 [GI] Pacific Classic, Wayne said 'I've had a few good horses in the past, but she's the first horse that makes me feel lucky to be the owner. I've never had that feeling before. I think it's called pride.'”

Owner Robert Masterson saluted Tepin's Hall of Fame induction at the venue where he purchased her for $140,000 just over a decade ago. She emerged as a champion turf horse as a 4-year-old, winning 11 of her last 15 races, including the G1 Queen Anne at Royal Ascot, the second of her three victories over males, and won two division titles.

“The one thing about Tepin that I really admired was the more she raced and the more success she had, the greater the following she seemed to get from the people,” Masterson said. “The fans seemed to start to really love her. The first time I recognized it was when she overcame a 13-length deficit to win a Grade II [Hillsborough S.] at Tampa Bay Downs. When she crossed the finish line, there was just as an eruption of applause. It was like a crescendo at the end of a concert that was so good. And when she won up in Woodbine in Canada when she beat the boys in the Grade I [Woodbine Mile S.], we're having the trophy presentation, and we stopped the trophy presentation to recognize the fans who shouted loudly, 'Tepin. Tepin. Tepin.' It was such an appreciation from the Canadian fans.”

He continued, “Then again when she finished second in the Grade I at Santa Anita at the Breeders Cup [2016 Mile], when she was leaving, to go back to the barn, the grandstand started going, 'Tepin. Tepin. Tepin.' I think that was because she finished the last quarter of that Breeders Cup, the fastest quarter ever recorded on the grass at Santa Anita. And the fans really appreciated that even though she came up half a length short.”

Masterson told a story about seeing a family at Saratoga wearing homemade Tepin shirts and said she had a bar named for her at the track after her score at Royal Ascot.

“On behalf of Tepin and myself, I want to thank all the fans who came out and reacted positively to her and loved to watch her race,” Masterson said. “I want to thank Mark Casse and his son Norm for the excellent training job they did on her. I want to thank Julien Leparoux for the rides. I want to thank [David] Greathouse for helping me find her right here at the Fasig-Tipton yearling sale. And I want to thank the Hall of Fame committee for recognizing her accomplishments and voting her into the Hall of Fame. It's such an honor.”

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Beholder, Tepin Go Into Hall of Fame

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY-Just like Rachel Alexandra (Medaglia d'Oro) and Zenyatta (Street Cry {Ire}) in 2016, Beholder (Henny Hughes) and Tepin (Bernstein) are entering the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame together Friday in their first year of eligibility.

Six years after the no-brainer election package, Hall of Fame voters selected two brilliant race mares of the second decade of the 21st century to join the best-of-the-best club on Union Avenue. Though they excelled on different surfaces, there are plenty of similarities. Both were well-beaten in their career debuts. Both earned multiple division titles. Both won at the Breeders' Cup. Both beat males in Grade I races. Both are the first Hall of Fame horses handled by their Hall of Fame trainers. Neither was an especially expensive yearling purchase: Spendthrift Farm acquired Beholder for $180,000; Robert Masterson snagged Tepin for $140,000.

Together, Beholder and Tepin won 31 of 49 career starts, 63.2%, and finished in the top three 43 times, 87.7%. Their combined purse earnings were $10,594,518.

What does it say to their trainers that they are first-ballot Hall of Famers?

Mark Casse on Tepin: “It Just shows what I already knew, that she's great.”

Richard Mandella on Beholder: “I'm not surprised. I think she made that impression on people with her record. She has done things that either not many or no horses have done. Fillies and mares running 1 1/4 miles under two minutes? I'm not saying none have, but I don't know that many have. And to win a Grade 1 at 2-3-4-5 and 6, I think, speaks for itself.”

Beholder and Tepin, the only two selections in the contemporary division this year, are part of a class of eight that will be inducted at a ceremony that begins at 10:30 a.m. at the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion. The Historic Review Committee elected trainer Oscar White and the horses Hillsdale (Take Away) and Royal Heroine (Ire) (Lypheor {GB}). The Pillars of the Turf selections are James Cox Brady, Marshall Cassidy and James Ben Ali Haggin.

During her five seasons of competition with Mandella, Beholder won 18 of 26 starts. Thirteen of those victories were in graded stakes and 11 were at the highest level, Grade I. She won all three of her Breeders' Cup starts, the 2012 GI Juvenile Fillies, and the GI Distaff in 2013 and 2016. Sickness kept her out of the 2014 and 2015 events. In 2015, she was scratched two days before a scheduled showdown with Triple Crown winner American Pharoah (Pioneerof the Nile) in the GI Classic. In her career finale the following year, she triumphed in the Distaff by a nose over Rick Porter's champion Songbird (Medaglia d'Oro) following an epic battle in the stretch. The thrilling score against Songbird helped her clinch her fourth Eclipse Award to go with the 2-year-old filly title in 2012, the 3-year-old filly crown in 2013, and older dirt female honors of 2015.

At Del Mar in 2015, she beat males the GI Pacific Classic by a 8 1/4 lengths in 1:59.77, a fast time while Mandella said she was being pulled up by jockey Gary Stevens.

“”Every trainer should get to train a horse like that,” Mandella said. “You can come up with all the fancy training ideas you want and most of them you're just throwing it in the wind. But this one I don't think it mattered who trained her, she was just great every year.”

Beholder finished second in her three starts before the 2016 Distaff–including a five-length loss to California Chrome (Lucky Pulpit) in the GI Pacific Classic–and was 3-1 in the wagering against Songbird.

“She was in heat a lot that summer,” Mandella said. “It was the first year she ever started doing that, that it was so obvious. And I think her mindset just wasn't quite the same. But she came out of it a couple of weeks before the Breeders' Cup and somebody interviewed me and I said, 'She's back. She'll run her race this time.'”

Mandella was not involved in the purchase of Beholder by the Spendthrift team. However, when Spendthrift's owner, B. Wayne Hughes, asked him to select some of the farm's young horses to train, he chose her. He said it was clear early on that she was a special horse.

“She was just a fat little 2-year-old that just didn't take the training serious,” he said. “But she showed she could run.”

After ending up fourth, beaten 8 1/2 lengths in her debut at Hollywood Park in June 2012, she broke her maiden easily and was beaten a nose by Executiveprivilege (First Samurai) in the GI Del Mar Debutante. Two races later, she beat Executiveprivilege by a length in the Juvenile Fillies.

All of Beholder's victories came on California tracks. Her second and last off-the-board finish was a fourth in the 2014 GI Ogden Phipps at Belmont Park. Mandella said she probably cost herself a victory in the GI Kentucky Oaks when, he said “she picked a fight with the pony and rider going to the gate” in front of the huge crowd at Churchill Downs. She was second by a half-length to Princess of Sylmar (Majestic Warrior).

“She had some behavioral problems, all along,” Mandella said. “She was 5% dynamite and the other 95% a sweetheart. But when she was bad, she was real bad.”

Mandella pointed to a pair of starts as being at the top of the list of his favorite Beholder moments.

“Well, the Pacific Classic is just breathtaking,” he said. “And then the last race, to beat that great mare that ran second of Mr. Porter's, Songbird.”

Mandella was looking forward to attending the induction ceremony, but had to cancel his trip from California because he tested positive for Covid-19.

Tepin took a little longer to emerge as a star for Casse. He described her as a good 2-year-old in a four-race season that included a victory in the GIII Delta Downs Debutante. Casse moved her to grass in the second race of her winless 3-year-old season.

“The last time we ran her as a 3-year-old, she didn't run well,” Casse said. “She actually was very distressed after the race and [Masterson] and I kind of looked at each other and he said to me, 'Why don't we send her home?' We sent her back to Ocala and gave her a little break, just gave her a couple months off.”

Casse said he prefers that  newly turned 4-year-olds have a little extra time before they start facing older horses. She was away from the races from August until March.

“We did that, and then when she came back as a 4-year-old, she was a monster,” Casse said. “It was like a different horse. The rest is history.”

Tepin promptly reeled off three straight wins, topped by a half-length victory over Filimbi (Mizzen Mast) in the GI Just a Game S. at Belmont Park. That flurry of success between March 21 and June 6 was a precursor of what was ahead. By the time she completed her career with a second in the 2016 GI Breeders' Cup Mile, she had prevailed in 11 of 15 starts and finished second the four times she did not win. Two of those setbacks, one by a nose in the GI Diana H. and the other by a head in the GII Ballston Spa S., came at Saratoga after the Just a Game.

A seven-length triumph in the GI First Lady S. at Keeneland encouraged Casse to try her against males over the same course four weeks later in the GI Breeders' Cup Mile. Sent off at $4.90-1, she used her speed to win by 2 1/4 lengths. With her 5-2-0 record in seven races, she was voted the female turf Eclipse Award.

Tepin extended her unbeaten streak with four more wins to open 2016 and then was presented with another challenge, running at Royal Ascot in the G1 Queen Anne S.

“To be honest with you,” Casse said, “I wasn't overjoyed about going to Royal Ascot simply because I thought we had maybe the best turf horse in the country, maybe in the world and I just felt like it was a big ask of her.”

Tepin was up to the task and finished first in the 13-horse field by a half-length under her regular rider Julien Leparoux.

“If I knew what I know now, I don't know if I would have taken her because it's so tough, Casse said. “It just shows you really how great she was.”

Tepin resumed her career in in September with a victory over males in the GI Woodbine Mile at Woodbine. She was second to Photo Call (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in the First Lady and came up just short in her finale, losing by a half-length to Tourist as she tried to repeat in the Mile. Her 6-2-0 record in eight starts produced another Eclipse.

“Crazy thing about her was that probably the best race she ever ran in her life was her last start,” Casse said. “She should probably should have won the Breeders' Cup again. She kind of got shuffled back which was not what where she liked to be. The normal Tepin turning for home would have been right there on the lead. She was back and she was coming wide and Tourist, Joel [Rosario] rode Tourist that day. He snuck up the rail and kind of got in front of her and she still almost ran him down. I always looked at that, even though she didn't win it, as maybe one of her greatest races.

“The race of her life was Royal Ascot and she gave us an experience that I'll probably never experience again.”

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