Independence Hall, Magic On Tap Face Brazilian Royal Ship In Californian

Trainer Michael McCarthy's classy Independence Hall heads Saturday's Grade 2, $200,000 Californian Stakes at Santa Anita, an iconic steppingstone to the Grade 1 Hollywood Gold Cup, which will be run on Memorial Day, May 31.  The Californian, for 3-year-olds and up, has a attracted a field of five to the Arcadia, Calif., track.

A Grade 3 winner going a one turn mile at age 2 in New York, Independence Hall, a 4-year-old colt by Constitution, comes off a solid fourth-place finish, beaten 2 ½ lengths, in the G1 Santa Anita Handicap March 6 and will be shortening up a furlong while retaining the services of leading man Flavien Prat.

A troubled third two starts back in the G1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational at Gulfstream Park Jan. 23, Independence Hall was keen early in the Big 'Cap and tired a bit late to be beaten a half length for third by race favorite and previously unbeaten Maxfield.

Owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Twin Creeks Racing Stables, LLC and Kathleen and Robert Veratti, Independence Hall was originally trained by eastern-based Michael Trombetta and will be making his fifth start for McCarthy on Saturday.  With four wins, two of them stakes, from nine starts, Independence Hall is the top money earner in the field with $630,600.

Idle 15 months, Bob Baffert's Magic On Tap came back to the races running on March 28, as he stalked the early pace and drew off to an impressive 1 ½-length allowance win going 1 1/16 miles with Prat up.  A Summer Wind Equine homebred, Magic On Tap is a 5-year-old horse by Tapit that has good natural speed and tremendous upside as he tries stakes competition for the first time in what will be his fifth start.

With Prat opting to stick with Independence Hall, Magic On Tap, who has two wins and as many seconds from four starts, will be ridden for the first time by Umberto Rispoli.

Perhaps the biggest question mark in Saturday's Californian is Brazilian-bred Royal Ship, who comes off a fast finishing fifth-place finish on turf to talented Hit the Road in the G1 Frank E. Kilroe Mile on March 6 for trainer Richard Mandella.  A Group 1 winner on grass in his native Brazil, he raced twice on dirt in his 11 starts, finishing third in his seven furlong debut in July  2019 and a troubled fourth in the G3 Native Diver Stakes two starts back on Nov. 21 at Del Mar.

With a recent race to his credit, Royal Ship, a 5-year-old gelding by Midshipman, looms dangerous in what will be his fifth stateside start for Mandella with regular rider Mike Smith back aboard.  A winner of five consecutive turf races in Brazil, Royal Ship, who will be making his 12th career start, need only finish as well on dirt as he did in the grassy Kilroe on March 6 to be a major factor Saturday as he seeks his first local win.

GRADE II CALIFORNIAN WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS
IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 8 of 9  Approximate post time 4:30 p.m. PT

  1. Growth Engine—Tyler Baze—122
  2. Magic On Tap—Umberto Rispoli—122
  3. Country Grammer—Abel Cedillo–124
  4. Royal Ship—Mike Smith—122
  5. Independence Hall—Flavien Prat–122

First post time for a nine-race card on Saturday is at 1 p.m.  For additional information, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

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Homebred ‘Stars’ in the Making for Spendthrift

A pair of Spendthrift Farm homebreds stamped themselves as 3-year-olds to watch for the second half of the season with recent jaw-dropping 'TDN Rising Star' performances.

Following Sea (c, 3, Runhappy–Quick Flip, by Speightstown) earned his 'Rising Star' badge with a flashy maiden win at second asking for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert on the GI Arkansas Derby undercard, good for a gaudy 97 Beyer Speed Figure.

The bay was hustled to the front by Joel Rosario in the six-furlong affair and was pressed on his inside through an opening quarter in :21.89. He began to shake clear heading into the far turn, kicked for home in complete control and was never seriously asked down the lane en route to an effortless 5 3/4-length decision.

Following Sea's final time of 1:09.92 bested the 1:10.13 final clocking posted by Edgeway (Competitive Edge) at the same distance later on the card for filly and mare sprinters in the Carousel S.

Following Sea previously crossed the line a solid second after a wide trip on debut behind stablemate and subsequent GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby fourth Defunded (Dialed In), but had his number taken down and placed third for causing interference shortly after the start at Santa Anita Mar. 6.

“We always loved him and raised him right here on the farm,” Spendthrift General Manager Ned Toffey said. “He's taken a little bit–he's a good-sized colt and had a couple of ticktack issues that kept him from running earlier. Bob was a little frustrated with his first start–he still showed some talent–but he really put it together Saturday. I loved what I saw. The way he made that move on the turn and put the race away at that point… It looked very easy. It looked very fluid. And it looked very fast. We thought something like that might be there and couldn't be happier.”

As for what's next and potentially stretching Following Sea out going forward, Toffey said:

“It's hard to know how he'll stretch out, but yes, he has the size and shape. Runhappy was definitely best sprinting, but you really never know until you try them. We're eager to find out ourselves.”

Toffey continued, “If a horse is ready to go on and make the move into much bigger company, it's always been really impressive how well Bob does that. For now, we're just gonna enjoy the win and let the horse tell Bob what he's ready to do next.”

Quick Flip–a winner of her first three starts at two, including Tampa's Sandpiper S.–was purchased by Spendthrift Farm carrying Following Sea in utero for $230,000 at the 2017 Keeneland November Sale. She is a half-sister to the Baffert-trained SW & MGSP Qahira (Cairo Prince) and SW Stormin' Lyon (Storm Boot), and hails from the family of GISW Mitterand (Hold Your Peace).

In addition to the stakes-placed Inspeightof (Orb), Quick Flip's most recent produce includes a 2-year-old Into Mischief filly, purchased by bloodstock agent Mike Ryan for $450,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase, and a 2021 Hard Spun colt. Quick Flip will be bred back to Authentic, per Toffey.

“It looks like a bargain now,” Toffey said with a laugh of purchasing the now 12-year-old mare. “Those are always tricky–buying one in foal can really go either way. We certainly had a lot of respect for Runhappy and liked the mare's page. Thought she would be a good, useful mare for us to breed in house. We're very excited going forward.”

Missy P. (f, 3, Into Mischief–Greer Lynn, by Speightstown) was another no doubt 'Rising Star' carrying the orange-and-purple silks of B. Wayne Hughes's operation, romping by 9 1/2 lengths going 5 1/2 furlongs on debut for Hall of Famer Richard Mandella at Santa Anita Mar. 12.

The full-sister to GISW and fellow 'Rising Star' Mia Mischief forced the issue from an outside second, cruised up to challenge approaching the quarter pole and opened daylight in the stretch under a handride by Flavien Prat to win like a 2-5 shot should. She earned a 90 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort.

Missy P. has posted three moves since her unveiling, most recently working five furlongs in :59.80 (5/22) at Santa Anita Apr. 8.

“Richard has thought about the [GII] Eight Belles [S. going seven furlongs at Churchill Downs Apr. 30] or just running her for some listed blacktype out in California,” Toffey said. “We'll see. That may be the thing to do–get her blacktype before we go bear hunting.”

He continued, “I was out in L.A. this last weekend and was able to see her. The phrase that came to my mind watching her train was, 'coiled spring.' She's really a muscular and well-defined filly. About the time of her first start, Richard said that she weighed 1,200 pounds. That's a big horse. She just looks great. She's a good, correct filly.”

Mia Mischief, heroine of the 2019 GI Humana Distaff S. at Churchill Downs, was sold by Spendthrift for $135,000 as a Keeneland September yearling. She later brought $300,000 as a Fasig-Tipton Florida Select 2-Year-Old and $2.4 million from Stonestreet as a horse of racing age/broodmare prospect at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Mixed Sale.

“Missy P. is much more substantial and much more powerful,” Toffey said. “That's saying a lot because Mia Mischief was a really stout, well-made muscular filly herself.”

Having Missy P. join Spendthrift's racing stable wasn't always the plan. She was scratched from the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Yearling Sale after getting cast in her stall, Toffey said.

“She's one that we may have dodged a bullet on,” Toffey said. “She just was a little off behind when we were getting very close to needing to ship her up to the sale. We always felt very good about her being fine, but you couldn't take one like that to sell.”

Missy P.'s dam Greer Lynn, a winner of one of four career starts for Hughes, is a daughter of the fantastic producer Roll Over Baby (Rollin On Over), dam of GSWs Roll Hennessy Roll (Hennessy) and Sing Baby Sing (Unbridled's Song); MSW & GSP Majorbigtimesheet (Carson City); SW & MGISP Value Plus (Unbridled's Song); and MGSP Werblin (Unbridled's Song).

Greer Lynn was acquired privately by Spendthrift after RNA'ing for $400,000 as a Keeneland November weanling.

“She essentially was a failed pinhook,” Toffey said. “We bought her with the intention of flipping her back in a yearling sale. She just didn't grow and wasn't at a real impressive stage as a yearling, so we kept her and put her into training. Again, like a lot of horses, we always felt like there was plenty of talent there, but she just had some minor things that kept her from really demonstrating it. She was always a beautiful mare and kind of a classic, Speightstown type. We bred her to a lot of horses in house and maybe we didn't always give her the best opportunity to be successful, but Into Mischief is pretty good at righting those wrongs.”

Sent to leading sire War Front by Spendthrift, Geer Lynn brought $700,000 from SF Bloodstock at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton November Sale, then switched hands again at the 2020 Keeneland November Sale, bringing $750,000 from Summer Wind Equine. Greer Lynn is also represented by a 2-year-old Goldencents filly, purchased by bloodstock agent Mike Ryan for $300,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase, and a Medaglia d'Oro colt of this year. She aborted her 2020 War Front foal.

In addition to the aforementioned Mia Mischief, the Into Mischief/Speightstown cross is also responsible for recent GI Carter H. winner Mischevious Alex and MGSW Engage.

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Family First: Victor Espinoza Back At Santa Anita And Raring To Go

Victor Espinoza does not plan to retire anytime soon.

The affable native of Mexico, his smile as imminent and bright as the sunrise, burst onto the international racing scene with the fairytale horse California Chrome seven years ago, swept the Triple Crown on American Pharoah a year later and became a global celebrity, appearing on “Dancing with the Stars” and “The Tonight Show,” with lucrative commercial offers his for the taking.

A member of the Hall of Fame since 2017, Espinoza's honors could fill a mansion's mantle, among them Santa Anita's George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award, three ESPYs as best jockey, three Kentucky Derby wins and the “Excellence in Sports Performance Yearly Award” presented by the ABC Network.

But it's not all take. He understands it is better to give than to receive, which is why Espinoza has been donating 10 percent of his sizable income to the City of Hope pediatric research and treatment center in Duarte to aid children stricken with cancer.

All that became relatively meaningless, however, on July 22, 2018, when he suffered a severe neck injury during a workout spill at Del Mar.

The damage was career-threatening, but Espinoza labored through it and was back riding and winning seven months later.

But on May 23 he turns 49 and today appears to be merely a dot on racing's map. He has ridden in only 22 races at Santa Anita this meet, winning two, the last coming aboard Stella Noir on March 19.

But figures can be deceiving. This is not to say elder statesmen in the jockey colony find mounts hard to come by this meet, since fellow Hall of Fame members Kent Desormeaux, 51, and Mike Smith, 55, ride here too, fulfilling one vital requirement: you must be present.

Victor Espinoza still has a passion for the game and his priorities in order.

“He had to step away for a while,” said his agent of eight years, Brian Beach, explaining Victor's sparse participation this meet. “He went to Mexico to help his mother, who is in her 80s and required some medical attention, but we didn't want to publicize it. He kept a low profile and it cost him time.

“While all that was going on, just about every horse he had been riding ran, and since we had kind of a small circle of business to start with, it's been kind of tough.

“We're trying to get back to riding, but with two and three days of racing a week and short fields, it's been difficult.

“But Victor is healthy and ready to go. He's a workout fiend and been posting his workout videos on Instagram, so we're looking for the right opportunities to come along.”

Don't bet against them. Victor Espinoza always looks at the glass as half full, and with career purse earnings approaching $205 million, safe to say racing needs Victor more than Victor needs racing.

Little wonder he once called himself “The luckiest Mexican on earth.”

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Respected Southern California Horseman Neil French, 68, Passes

A highly respected horseman, trainer Neil French passed away from heart failure Saturday morning at age 68 at Arcadia Methodist Hospital near Santa Anita.  Beset with rheumatoid arthritis for the past 10 years, French marshaled on with a small stable, assisted by a golf cart which took him from his barn to Santa Anita's grandstand apron, where he was able to observe his horses train.

“The horses were his life,” said French's sister Joy from her home in Spooner, Wisc.  “The arthritis was very, very hard on him and this time, he had to go to the hospital and his heart gave out.  He never got married or had kids, the horses were his life.

“Our family is from Wisconsin and my dad had an uncle who was a licensed blacksmith in Los Angeles, so my parents moved out there in 1950, because my dad (Arden French) wanted to learn that trade.  He did and he worked as a farrier at Los Alamitos before he became a Quarter Horse trainer in the late 50s.  Neil was skinny as a rail and he used to get on my dad's horses when he switched over to Thoroughbreds.”

A licensed Thoroughbred trainer since 1971, Neil French, who trained primarily in Southern California, would have turned 69 on July 25.

Among his top horses were Pencil Point, a winner of the 1982 Bing Crosby Handicap at Del Mar and June's Reward, a California-bred gelding by Hail Bold King.  June's Reward, who was owned by Ken Porter, was an unlucky third in the 1991, Grade 2 Del Mar Derby under Alex Solis.  He would go on to win the 1992 California Cup Classic at Santa Anita under Eddie Delahoussaye and returned $10.80 to win.

“He was a guy with not too many horses, but I loved riding for him,” said Delahoussaye.  “I won quite a few races for him, he was a real good horseman and a nice guy.  We were pretty close in age and I'm really sad to hear this, he'll be missed.”

French's last stakes-caliber horse was Chocolate Coated, a Kentucky-bred filly by Candy Ride who was second in Santa Anita's Grade 2 Autumn Miss Stakes on Oct. 29, 2017.

Among some of French's other notable runners are Wanstead Gardens ($200,325), Princess V ($173,209), Slew City Citadel ($159,024), Basic Rate ($150,975), Young Flyer ($144,025) and Grinding It Out ($138,120).

French won 257 races from 2,080 starters, who earned $6,436,620.

Neil French is survived by his mother, Loretta, three sisters, Joy, Joan and Sundee, as well as many nieces and nephews.

Services are pending at this time and will be made known via the Santa Anita Racing Office in the near future.

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