Cyberknife Gunning for His Third Grade I in Runhappy Travers

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – Though an impressive win in the GI Haskell S. helped make Cyberknife (Gun Runner) the second choice on the morning line for Saturday's GI Runhappy Travers S., trainer Brad Cox agreed with the question: Is your colt underappreciated?

“I think he is a little bit, given the fact he's won two Grade Is,” Cox said.

Very quickly, Cox made it clear that he was not quibbling that the linemaker for the 153rd Travers figured that Epicenter (Not This Time) would have the lowest odds by his name when the gates open. The estimate was that the GII Jim Dandy S. winner leaving from post six would go off at 7-5 in the field of eight.

“Obviously, the favorite is a very good horse,” Cox said. “He was second in the Kentucky Derby and I think that goes a long way. Then, the Kentucky Derby winner is 10-1.”

Cyberknife was listed at 7-2 after drawing the rail in the 1 1/4 miles Travers. Rich Strike (Keen Ice), who won the Derby at odds of 80-1, will be in the next gate. He was sixth in the GI Belmont S. June 11 in his most recent start. Rich Strike will be the 27th Derby winner to have a go in the Travers. Ten have won.

“The Kentucky Derby this year is a race, and I'm not taking anything away from the winner, but it's just a race that if it was run several more times, you would get several different results,” Cox said. “It was one of those Derbys that you see every 10 to 15 years when you don't think what can happen happens. That had a lot to do with the pace and I had two horses who were involved in that pace. If we rewind, we wouldn't go that quick. No one would have. It's just the way it happened and it worked out.”

Cyberknife, owned by Saratoga resident Al Gold's Gold Square LLC, ended up 18th in the Derby after starting in post 16 at 14-1 after staying close to the pace. Another Cox Derby horse, Zozos (Munnings), also paid the price for going too fast and was 10th. His third Derby runner, Tawny Port (Pioneerof the Nile), was able to close after sitting off the torrid early fractions and finished seventh.

“That's not a true read with them going that quick that early,” Cox said. “I don't think he will have any issue with the mile and a quarter, just based off the pedigree and how he has finished up in his races.”

That pedigree has Travers connections. Gun Runner was third in Arrogate's track-record Travers in 2016 and his dam sire, Flower Alley (Distorted Humor) won the race in 2005.

Cyberknife locked up his Derby berth with a 2 3/4-length win in the GI Arkansas Derby at 5-1. The run at Churchill Downs on the first Saturday in May was a disappointment, but Cyberknife prepped for the Haskell with a win by a nose at 1-2 in the GIII Matt Winn S. at Churchill June 12. He picked up the second Grade I–the only runner in the Travers field to have a pair–with a big performance at Monmouth Park July 23. Months ago, Cox said that Cyberknife was a slow-maturing colt that might be better in the second half of the year. So far, that looks to be an astute assessment.

“He broke the track record and the stakes record in the Haskell,” Cox said. “We're looking forward to giving him an opportunity at a mile and a quarter. We know a lot more about him now than we did when we ran him a mile and a quarter in the Kentucky Derby. Hopefully, he won't be part of some type of suicidal pace. I don't think there'd be one anyway. We'll see how it goes. Overall, the horse is doing really well. He settled in here. He's been here for five weeks, I think he's set up for a huge effort.”

Cyberknife has worked three times over the main track at Saratoga, most recently five furlongs in 1:00 on Saturday.

Starting from the inside post in the Haskell under jockey Florent Geroux, Cyberknife sat a ground-saving, stalking trip. While Taiba (Gun Runner) was making an outside move toward the favorite Jack Christopher (Munnings) near the quarter pole, Cyberknife and Geroux were attacking from near the rail.

“I think probably the most impressive thing is when they turned for home, how Florent seemed to have a good bit of horse left,” Cox said. “It just showed how much talent he really has. He really cruised up there to the lead inside Jack Christopher and was able to dig in and really fight to get there and galloped out well. That was the most impressive.

“Another thing that was very impressive with him, which he did in the Arkansas Derby, he's able to sit inside of horses, and he didn't get too worked up and feel the pressure from other horses. He'll relax down there on the inside, which I think is a big asset.”

Being comfortable on the rail could prove to be a benefit in the Travers, which has had but two winners from post 1 in the last 40 years: Holy Bull (Great Above) in 1994 and Arrogate (Unbridled's Song) in 2016.

The last Haskell winner to double up in the Travers was Point Given (Thunder Gulch) in 2001. Since then, 12 Haskell winners have come up short in the Travers, most notably Triple Crown winner American Pharoah (Pioneerof the Nile), who was second to Keen Ice (Curlin) in 2015.

Cox won the Travers last year with Essential Quality (Tapit). While he is confident that Cyberknife is ready for this test, he said he was mildly surprised that the colt was placed as high as he was on the morning line.

“Maybe a little bit,” he said. “I thought maybe Zandon (Upstart) would have been second choice. It didn't really matter. I thought that this guy who does the odds here in New York does it as well as anybody, so he's probably spot on. It doesn't really matter as long as we're the first choice after the race.”

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Aug. 26 Insights: $825k Justify Colt Debuts On NYB Showcase Day

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

4th-SAR, $88k, Msw, (S), 2yo, 7f, 2:47 p.m. ET

The New York-bred program will be celebrated Friday at Saratoga with an all state-bred card featuring six stakes, and a live-looking maiden race in the fourth headlined by Hoolie Racing Stable's firster CHULLIGAN (Justify) should not be overlooked. The chestnut, who sold for $825,000 last summer at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga, is the second foal to race out of three-time New York-bred stakes winner and 2017 GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint upsetter Bar of Gold (Medaglia d'Oro), following GSW turfer Coinage (Tapit). The Christophe Clement trainee shows a sharp-looking worktab over this track, most recently going a half-mile in :47 4/5 (8/40) from the gate Aug. 19. Quick to Accuse (Accelerate) also opens his account in here for owner Rupp Racing and trainer Horacio De Paz. The bay is a half to millionaire New York-bred stalwart and 11-time stakes winner Mr. Buff (Friend Or Foe) and sold for $200,000 at OBS March after breezing a furlong in :10 1/5. TJCIS PPs

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Summer Breezes: Aug. 26, 2022

Some of the most highly anticipated races during the summer racing season are the 'baby' races during the boutique meetings at both Saratoga and Del Mar and at Ellis Park, which attracts its fair share of high-priced offspring from a variety of top national outfits. Summer Breezes highlights debuting 2-year-olds at those meetings that have been sourced at the breeze-up sales earlier in the year, with links to their under-tack previews. Already this year at Saratoga, City Man (Mucho Macho Man), Mo Strike (Uncle Mo) and Empress Tigress (Classic Empire)–each a graduate of the 2-year-old sales–have already struck at stakes level, while the likes of juvenile purchases and 'TDN Rising Stars' Taiba (Gun Runner), We The People (Constitution) and Onesto (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) have also left their mark on graded/group competition this season. To follow are the horses entered for Friday:

Friday, August 26, 2022
Saratoga 4, 2:47 p.m. ET
Horse (Sire), Sale, Price, Breeze
Flashy Alex (Gormley), FTMMAY, $12,000, click
C-Tom McCrocklin, agent; B-Randi Persaud
Quick to Accuse (Accelerate), OBSMAR, $200,000, click
C-Sequel, agt for Chester & Mary Broman; B-Mike Ryan, agt

Ellis 5, 5:52 p.m. ET
Mendeavour (Mendelssohn), OBSAPR, $175,000, click
C-Golden Rock Thoroughbreds, agent; B-Ryan Ritt

Del Mar 1, 6:00 p.m. ET
Bluegrass Ryder (Noble Mission), OBSAPR, $40,000, click
C-GOP Racing Stable Corp; B-John P Warren

Ellis 7, 6:48 p.m. ET
Play the Music (Mo Town), OBSAPR, $300,000, click
C-Eisaman Equine, agent; B-Glassman Racing LLC

Del Mar 4, 7:33 p.m. ET
Almont (Smiling Tiger), FTMMAY, $85,000, see below
C-Classic Bloodstock, agt; B-Little Red Feather, John Dowd, agt

 

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Aron Wellman Talks Nest, Buying Strategies, HISA On Writers’ Room

It's a busy time of year for Aron Wellman's Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, with yearling sale season now in full swing alongside the iconic Saratoga and Del Mar meets. But Wellman and his partners are full of energy these days thanks in large part to their Nest (Curlin)–co-owned with Repole Stable and Michael House–who likely sewed up an Eclipse Award for Champion 3-Year-Old Filly with a dominant victory in the GI Alabama S. Saturday at the Spa. Tuesday, Wellman sat down with the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week to discuss Nest but also a variety of industry issues in an expansive interview.

“I felt oddly calm going into the race,” Wellman said of his mindset before the Alabama. “She just allows for us to have a lot of confidence. There's plenty of reason to be nervous when you're arguably going for a championship, but she had just thrived so much in the month between the CCA Oaks and Alabama that we went in with a lot of conviction that she was going to go out and perform well again. As far as the performance was concerned, it was nothing short of brilliant. She put on another breathtaking display, and she's just getting stronger and better and more comfortable in her own skin.”

Asked whether or not Nest will return to race as a 4-year-old, Wellman said, “We have every intention of running her back next year. Look, Eclipse is in the business of racing. And while we certainly have a program, an established pipeline of what we refer to as Eclipse fillies that we've made a habit out of developing over the course of the past decade and then selling for seven figures at auction or privately, this filly is cut from a different cloth than most of our Grade I fillies have been in the sense that she's only supposed to get better. Health, of course is always in the back of your mind, but being by Curlin out of an A.P. Indy mare, the thought of her maturing into a 4-year-old and beyond is super exciting. And Mike Repole is the ultimate sportsman. Mike House is getting up there in age and is having the time of his life. I don't want to speak for them, but I would say that having a filly that's capable of running in the races that she's capable of running in at the end of this year and through next, hopefully it's far more important than any zeros that they could add to their ledger at this point.”

The conversation turned to the sometimes rocky implementation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act, and Wellman was asked for his impression of HISA's early days.

“The types of partners Eclipse attracts are interested in integrity in all respects and really, what they want most when we send a horse out onto the track is a level playing field,” he said. “Nobody's taking an edge or able to take an edge. So I don't think there's any downside to HISA. Are there going to be growing pains? Absolutely. Any initiative like this, especially in the political realm, is going to have bumps in the road, and we're seeing that. But I've got to be honest, I've been very impressed with HISA's upper management, with [CEO] Lisa Lazarus. She is willing to listen, and although change and getting it right might not be immediate and it might not be happening as fast as we all want it to be, they're trying. And we finally broke down that barrier of actually having some unified governing body as it relates to medication, at least. We've been fighting an impossible battle for decades where we've made very little progress. At the end of the day, we can't lose sight of the fact that the reason HISA is in effect is that we want to operate on a level playing field. If we keep our eye on the ball in that respect, we're going to be okay.”

Elsewhere on the show–which is also sponsored by Coolmore, the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, XBTV, Three Chimneys, West Point Thoroughbreds and Legacy Bloodstock–Joe Bianca, Bill Finley and Jon Green reacted to the arrest of Chad Brown and the suspension of Jamie Ness and looked forward to a blockbuster GI Runhappy Travers S. day at card. Click here to watch the show; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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