‘Knock On Wood, We’re Heading The Right Way’: Prat Aboard As Hot Rod Charlie Breezes For O’Neill

HOT ROD IN SHARP WORK FOR KENTUCKY DERBY

Grade 2 Louisiana Derby winner Hot Rod Charlie worked five furlongs Saturday at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., in company with stablemate Hammering Lemon, after which Doug O'Neill had high praise for the son of Oxbow as he prepares for the Kentucky Derby on May 1.

“He worked really, really well,” said O'Neill, in pursuit of his third win in the Run for the Roses, having won it in 2012 with I'll Have Another and 2016 with Nyquist.

“I think the clockers gave him 1:01 and two, breezing (the actual time was 1:01.20, breezing),” said O'Neill, who had Flavien Prat aboard. “Breezing” is a rare designation given to horses by clockers in Southern California, who typically designate workouts as being done “handily.”

“Charlie had company with a horse named Hammering Lemon (clocked in 1:01.60) who broke off in front of him. They both finished up good but Charlie was the better of the two.

“Knock on wood we're heading the right way.”

Bob Baffert, seeking his seventh win the Kentucky Derby, plans to work Runhappy Santa Anita Derby runner-up Medina Spirit “next weekend.”

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Hot Rod Charlie Tunes Up at Santa Anita

Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow), front-running winner of the GII TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby in his most recent trip to the races, prepped for the May 1 GI Kentucky Derby with a five-furlong breeze Saturday morning over the Santa Anita main track. The half-brother to champion Mitole (Eskendereya) stopped the clock in 1:01.20 to the satisfaction of trainer Doug O'Neill.

“'Charlie' had company with a horse named Hammering Lemon (Square Eddie) [clocked in 1:01.60] who broke off in front of him,” the two-time Derby-winning trainer commented. “They both finished up good, but Charlie was the better of the two. Knock on wood we're heading the right way.”

Winner of his maiden in his first try at a dirt route last October, Hot Rod Charlie spiced up the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile exacta, going down by 3/4 of a length to 'TDN Rising Star' Essential Quality (Tapit) as a 94-1 outsider. The dark bay was a troubled third to Medina Spirit (Protonico) when making his seasonal debut in the GIII Robert B. Lewis S. Jan. 30, but led every step of the 9 1/2 furlongs of the Louisiana Derby to punch his ticket to the big dance.

The post Hot Rod Charlie Tunes Up at Santa Anita appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Standing Equine PET Now In Use At UC Davis

UC Davis has welcomed the latest standing equine PET scanner, the MILEPET, into clinical use, less than six years after performing the world's first PET scan on a horse.

Thanks to funding support from the UC Davis Center for Equine Health and the Stronach Group, the UC Davis veterinary hospital recently installed the most recent MILEPET. After the installation of the first scanner at Santa Anita Park racetrack, a second scanner was set up on the East Coast at the University of Pennsylvania. This newest instrument at UC Davis will provide the most innovative equine imaging technique using only standing sedation to the Northern California horse population.

Since the first equine PET scan was performed at UC Davis in 2015, there have been many other “firsts” as the team, led by Dr. Mathieu Spriet, worked to develop the use of the technique to improve detection of injuries in equine limbs. The   s were performed two years ago, removing the need for horses to undergo general anesthesia during imaging. Subsequently, our group validated the first scanner designed specifically to image horses prior to its installation at Santa Anita in Southern California. This scanner has now been used for over 200 studies at the racetrack, contributing to reducing the number of catastrophic injuries in racehorses.

For the past five years, the UC Davis veterinary hospital's robust equine clinical program has imaged over 100 horses, but until recently, all of these scans were performed with the piPET, a scanner originally developed to image the human brain. This program accomplished several milestones in the development of equine PET, establishing applications not only for racehorse safety, but also for diagnosis of bone and soft tissue injuries in sport horses and improved understanding of laminitis. The clinical use of the technique was limited due to the requirement to anesthetize horses, which increases costs and risks associated with the procedure.

The initial clinical case utilizing the new scanner at the UC Davis veterinary hospital was another first, a mule named Jool. She was the first patient included in a clinical trial aimed at combining standing PET with standing MRI to provide the most advanced imaging for foot lameness in horses (or mules).

In addition, a second standing PET study is underway, aimed at assessing the progression of laminitis. Laminitis is an extremely debilitating disease that can unfortunately be fatal. Laminitic patients require long-term, careful hoof care performed by an experienced farrier. UC Davis veterinary hospital farrier Shane Westman has a long list of these challenging patients. In order to manage the trimming and shoeing optimally, Westman relies on imaging techniques. In a pilot study performed on laminitic cases at UC Davis, PET demonstrated its value in precisely assessing the involvement of the soft tissues of the foot with laminitis. As PET now becomes available using simple sedation, it simplifies the use of the technique and allows for repeated scans every time a patient comes for shoeing and trimming.

In addition to these two specific clinical research studies, standing PET is now available to any equine patient in Northern California. Standing PET can image any area of the limb from the foot to the carpus (knee) or tarsus (hock).

The racehorse population of Golden Gate Fields racetrack will also benefit from the new PET scanner. As the technique has quickly gained in popularity at Santa Anita Park, a few Northern California racehorses have traveled south to be imaged with PET. Now these horses won't need to travel so far. In addition to being in operation at UC Davis, the MILEPET scanner will soon be transported on a weekly basis to image horses at the equine hospital at Golden Gate Fields.

Dr. Spriet was very enthusiastic about these latest developments in the UC Davis equine PET program, “The standing PET scanner will allow us to offer this cutting-edge modality to more cases than we could before. Repeating scans on the same patient will help us optimize treatment and rehabilitation for better outcomes.”

“Through support from our donors and endowments, we have been able to support the equine PET program at UC Davis since 2016 by providing both research and equipment support,” said Dr. Carrie Finno, director of the UC Davis Center for Equine Health. “It is incredibly rewarding to see this technology now being used to prevent catastrophic injuries in racehorses across California.”

More horses, and mules, will be scanned in the near future!

Read more here.

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Champion Gamine Cruises To Easy Victory In Seasonal Debut In Las Flores

The champ is back.  Idle since winning the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint at Keeneland on Nov. 7, Bob Baffert-trained Gamine, in what amounted to a paid workout, broke alertly from her rail post and made every pole a winning one in taking Sunday's Grade 3, $100,000 Las Flores Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.  With regular rider John Velazquez up, she got six furlongs while well within herself in 1:09.52 and drawing off by five lengths.

“She came back so good,” said Velazquez, who rode Gamine in her final four starts of 2020.  “She felt as good as last year.  Bob thinks she's not ready yet, that's what he told me.  She does everything so effortlessly, it's just everything she does, makes my job a lot easier.  I just steer where I want to go and that's it.  That's the biggest point of her strength, I believe.”

With no place or show wagering, Gamine, who has now finished first across the wire in six of her seven career starts by a combined 38 ¼ lengths, was off at 1-20 and paid $2.10 to win, with no place and show wagering.

“I told Johnny before, 'With the one hole, make sure you don't let her make the gap (as the horses come out of the seven furlong chute onto the main track oval),” said Baffert.  “Ride her like she's 10-1.'  I'm happy for my owners and everybody involved.  They are excited, it's Easter Sunday, so it's a big win…

“They (the fans) saw one of the greatest fillies I've ever trained going one turn.  Hopefully, we'll stretch her out.”

Purchased for $1.8 million out of the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-year-olds in Training Sale, Gamine, a 4-year-old filly by Into Mischief out of the Kafwain mare Peggy Jane, is owned by Michael Lund Petersen.  With the Las Flores purse of $60,000, she increased her earnings to $893,000.  With four graded stakes wins, three of them Grade I's, her official resume now reads five wins from seven starts, as she was disqualified from purse money earned in a first condition allowance win at Oaklawn Park on May 2, 2020.

Baffert's Qahira, who sat a joint second, about one length off the winner with Hang a Star and Biddy Duke leaving the half mile pole, proved second best under Flavien Prat as she finished 2 ¾ lengths in front of Biddy Duke.

Fractions on the race were 22.74, 45.77 and 57.54.

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