The TDN Derby Top 12 for June 23

We’re now 75 days out from the GI Kentucky Derby. Although the TDN Derby Top 12 and the Churchill Downs official leaderboard for Derby qualifying points rarely mirror each other, the first four horses in this week’s rankings just so happen to line up with the hierarchy in the points standings.

1) TIZ THE LAW (c, ConstitutionTizfiz, by Tiznow)
O-Sackatoga Stable. B-Twin Creeks Farm (NY). T-Barclay Tagg. Sales History: $110,000 yrl ’18 FTNAUG. Lifetime Record: MGISW, 6-5-0-1, $1,480,300.
Last Start: 1st GI Belmont S., BEL, June 20
Accomplishments Include: 1st GI Curlin Florida Derby, GP, Mar. 28, 1st GI Champagne S., 1st GIII Holy Bull S., GP, Feb. 1, 3rd GII Kentucky Jockey Club S., CD, Nov. 30
Next Start: GI Travers S., SAR, Aug. 8.
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 272.

Tiz the Law has not only held his form for the better part of a year, but he keeps evolving to the point where it now looks like this $110,000 SARAUG Constitution bay truly knows he’s toying with some fairly accomplished competition. It’s on to the GI Travers S. at Saratoga after trainer Barclay Tagg announced Sunday that Tiz exited his 3 3/4-length GI Belmont S. romp in fine shape physically and with good levels of energy, attitude and appetite. Per usual, Tiz was fast off the mark in the one-turn, nine-furlong first leg of the Triple Crown, but was quickly gathered in hand by jockey Manny Franco to allow the two main speed threats to come through along the inside. The New York-bred was a coiled, pace-pressing presence through honest splits in his three-path run up the long Belmont Park back straight, and Tiz’s reeling in of the top two after six furlongs in 1:09.94 seemed a foregone conclusion as he drew within range at will. His distinctive white blaze came over the top off the turn, then Tiz deftly slipped into a higher, unmatchable gear when prompted to dig in. Franco kept after his colt assertively, but the leaders had nothing left to give and the all-out closers weren’t in the same league. Just like in each of Tiz’s five wins to date, victory was assured by the eighth pole. Tiz earned a 100 Beyer for the effort, which didn’t at all look like it scraped the bottom of his stamina reserves.

2) HONOR A.P. (r, Honor CodeHollywood Story, by Wild Rush)
O-C R K Stable LLC. B-George Krikorian (Ky). T-John Shirreffs. Sales History: $850,000 yrl ’18 FTSAUG. Lifetime Record: GISW, 4-2-2-0, $362,200.
Last Start: 1st GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby June 6. Accomplishments Include: 2nd GII San Felipe S., SA, Mar. 7.
Next Start: Uncommitted. Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 120.
Eleven days after his strong, stalking score in the GI Santa Anita Derby, Honor A.P. ($850,000 FTSAUG) returned to the work tab last Wednesday for an easy half-mile breeze in :53.40. After the work, trainer John Shirreffs told TDN he has circled “in pencil” the 1 1/16 miles Shared Belief S. at Del Mar Aug. 1 for this Honor Code ridgling’s next race. “His mental aspect is the really big strength for him. He doesn’t get upset easily. He’s not a nervous horse,” Shirreffs explained when asked about Honor A.P.’s chief attributes. “He takes everything in stride. So that’s a big plus. And the other thing is his way of going really helps him. He gets over the ground so easily. He doesn’t hit the ground hard. He’s light on his feet.” After the Santa Anita Derby, jockey Mike Smith said, “It seems the farther you go with him the better. He’s just got that big long, beautiful, powerful stride.” Shirreffs also trained Honor A.P.’s dam, Hollywood Story. She earned $1.1 million and was a Grade I victress at nine furlongs.

3) AUTHENTIC (c, Into MischiefFlawless, by Mr. Greeley)
O-SF Racing LLC, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables LLC, Fred Hertrich III, John D. Fielding & Golconda Stables. B-Peter E. Blum Thoroughbreds LLC (KY). T-Bob Baffert. Sales History: $350,000 yrl ’18 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: MGSW & GISP, 4-3-1-0, $411,200.
Last Start: 2nd GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby, SA, June 5. Accomplishments Include: 1st GII San Felipe S., SA, Mar. 7; 1st GIII Sham S., SA, Jan. 4.
Next Start: GI Haskell S., MTH, July 18.
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 100.

In an exchange of text messages with TDN last week, trainer Bob Baffert said the only solid next-race commitment for any of his top 3-year-olds is the GI Haskell S. for Authentic. Baffert has won that stakes eight times, and has been second with the only two entries he’s had in it the past four years. Mike Smith will replace Drayden Van Dyke, per a June 18 story in Sports Illustrated. Forwardly placed horses traditionally have an advantage at speed-centric Monmouth, so the Haskell should play to the chief strength of this $350,000 KEESEP Into Mischief bay. Progression-wise, Authentic likely got more out of his Santa Anita Derby second (pressed the pace three wide on both turns after an awkward break) than his coast-to-coast score in the GII San Felipe S. back in March. Luckily for Authentic, time is on his side for the pandemic-altered Classics: He’s a May 5 foal who has had focus issues, like veering out erratically while soaring solo through the stretch in the GIII Sham S. back in January. He’s also had stutter-step starts in each of his last three races. A couple more months of maturity can only help.

4) KING GUILLERMO (c, Uncle MoSlow Sand, by Dixieland Band)
O-Victoria’s Ranch. B-Carhue Investments, Grouseridge Ltd. & Marengo Investments (KY). T-Juan Avila. Sales History: $90,000 RNA yrl ’18 KEESEP; $150,000 2yo ’19 OBSAPR. Lifetime Record: GSW & GISP, 5-2-1-1, $340,350.
Last Start: 2nd GI Arkansas Derby, OP, May 2
Accomplishments Include: 3rd Pulpit S., GP, Nov. 30, 1st
GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby
Next Start: GI Kentucky Derby, CD, Sept. 5
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 90.

King Guillermo was a mystery horse when he wired the GII Tampa Bay Derby at 49-1 off a three-month layoff. But his prolonged and determined second in the stronger/faster division of the split GI Arkansas Derby cemented has status within the Top 12. Now he’s slipping back under the radar, with no published workouts since that last start on May 2 and some relaxation time on a Florida farm. After the Arkansas Derby, trainer Juan Carlos Avila had stated a preference to train straight up to the Kentucky Derby. This Uncle Mo bay ($90,000 RNA KEESEP; $150,000 OBSAPR) has 90 qualifying points on the “Road to the Derby” leaderboard, good enough for fourth place right now in the standings.

5) ENFORCEABLE (c, TapitJustwhistledixie, by Dixie Union)
O-John Oxley. B-Clearsky Farm (KY). T-Mark Casse. Sales History: $775,000 RNA yrl ’18 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: GSW & GISP,
9-2-2-2, $367,150.
Last Start: 5th GII TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby, FG, Mar. 21
Accomplishments Include: 1st GIII Lecomte S., FG, Jan. 18; 3rd GI Claiborne Breeders’ Futurity, KEE, Oct. 5, 2nd GII Risen Star S. Div. 1, FG, Feb. 15.
Next Start: GII Toyota Blue Grass S., KEE, July 11
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 33.

Enforceable ($775,000 KEESEP RNA) is heading from trainer Mark Casse’s training center in Ocala to the GII Blue Grass S. at Keeneland, where he’ll attempt to rebound off a fifth-place finish in the Mar. 21 GII Louisiana Derby. On a National Thoroughbred Racing Association conference call last week, Casse likened the Florida-based comeback to the way he got 2016 juvenile champ Classic Empire to the winner’s circle after a series of setbacks early in that colt’s sophomore season. “You’ll remember a few years back, we had Classic Empire, and I think everybody kind of thought we were nuts [when] I said I was going to get him ready [for the Triple Crown]. And if you remember, we ran him right off of our place and won the Arkansas Derby. Our plan is to do the same here with Enforceable.” (Classic Empire, by the way, then ran fourth in the Kentucky Derby despite a horror trip and was second, beaten only a head, in the GI Preakness S.) Enforceable, whose forte has been closing from well off the pace, will have a jockey switch for the Blue Grass, with Joel Rosario replacing Julien Leparoux.

6) THOUSAND WORDS (c, Pioneerof the NilePomeroys Pistol, by Pomeroy)
O-Albaugh Family Stables & Spendthrift Farm. B-Hardacre Farm (Fl). T-Bob Baffert. Sales History: $1,000,000 yrl ’18 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: GSW, 5-3-0-0, $235,500.
Last Start: 11th Oaklawn S., OP, Apr. 11
Accomplishments Include: 1st GII Los Alamitos Futurity, LRC, Dec. 7, 1st GIII Robert B. Lewis S., SA, Feb. 1
Next Start: Possible for GIII Los Alamitos Derby, LRC, July 4
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 25.

Either the July 4 GIII Los Alamitos Derby or the July 11 Blue Grass S. will be the next start for Thousand Words, trainer Bob Baffert told TDN last week. The bet here is that this $1-million KEESEP bay goes in the Los Al Derby. Thousand Words won the GII Los Alamitos Futurity over that track last December. Plus it’s an easier ship from Santa Anita, and the race has only lured four and five starters in each of the past two runnings (with Baffert trainees winning both). Thousand Words reigned as the No. 1 kingpin on this list for most of the winter, then dropped precipitously after a punchless, no-excuse fourth in the Mar. 7 San Felipe S. His stock fell further after a beaten-fave 11th over a sealed track in the Oaklawn S. Apr. 11, but that day he truly looked like a horse who wasn’t comfortable with the wet footing, backpedaling from kickback 3 1/2 furlongs out. With the GI Kentucky Derby advanced to Sept. 5, he’s now back in play as a second-wind candidate. Thousand Words fired two consecutive training bullets earlier this month. Then he worked six furlongs in 1:13.20 (4/10) on Saturday while drawing well clear of older workmate Once On Whiskey (Bodemeister), who, coincidentally, won the 2018 Los Al Derby.

7) DR POST (c, Quality RoadMary Delaney, by Hennessy)
O-St. Elias Stable. B-Cloyce C. Clark (KY). T-Todd Pletcher. Sales History: $200,000 wlg ’18 KEESEP; $400,000 yrl ’18 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: SW & GISP, 4-2-1-0, $261,635.
Last Start: 2nd GI Belmont S., BEL, June 20
Accomplishments Include: 1st Unbridled S., GP, Apr. 25
Next Start: Uncommitted
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 60.

It’s been an uncharacteristically quiet season on the Derby trail for trainer Todd Pletcher in 2020, but his best chance could be arriving late on the scene in the form of Dr Post, who ran a capable second behind Tiz the Law in the Belmont S. This Quality Road colt ($200,000 KEENOV, $400,000 KEESEP) is now 2-1-0 from four starts, and he owns a better-than-it-looks score in the $75,000 Unbridled S. at Gulfstream that was notable for his grinding determination despite being blocked on the turn and again into the stretch. Dr Post’s sire was a four-time Grade I winner, thrice at nine furlongs and once in the one-turn Met Mile. His dam, Mary Delaney (Hennessey) was a front-running force in sprints 13 years ago who won a Grade II over seven furlongs. Pletcher said on Sunday next-race options are either the Haskell or Travers.

8) CEZANNE (c, CurlinAchieving, by Bernardini)
O-Mrs John Magnier, Michael B Tabor, Derrick Smith & St Elias Stable. B-Hill ‘n’ Dale Equine Holdings Inc & St Elias Stables LLC (KY). T-Bob Baffert. Sales History: $3,650,000 2yo ’19 FTFMAR. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $30,000.
Last Start: 1st Maiden Special Weight, SA, June 6.
Next Start: Uncommitted.
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 0.

Trainer Bob Baffert joked in a Sports Illustrated story last week that recent maiden-breaking stablemates Cezanne (the $3.65 million FTFMAR Curlin-sired sales topper) and Uncle Chuck (Uncle Mo, $250,000 KEESEP), were “walk-ons” taking the place of the barn’s recently sidelined or retired Derby prospects. But “pretty good walk-ons,” Baffert was quick to add. He told TDN via text message last week there were “no real plans” yet for a next race for both colts. Cezanne, who breezed an eighth in :10 flat prior to last year’s auction, earned a 90 Beyer for winning his debut at 6 1/2 furlongs, in which he battled in the two path amid a four-way go for the lead, then dug in off the turn to open up to a 2 1/4-length win.

9) BASIN (c, Liam’s MapAppenzell, by Johannesburg)
O-Jackpot Farm. B-Cottonwood Stables LLC (KY). T-Steve Asmussen. Sales History: $150,000 yrl ’18 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: GISW, 6-2-2-1, $471,000.
Last Start: 2nd GI Arkansas Derby, OP, May 2
Accomplishments Include: 1st GI Runhappy Hopeful S., SAR, Sept. 2, 3rd GII Rebel S., OP, Mar. 14
Next Start: GII Toyota Blue Grass S., KEE, July 11
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 50.

Basin, last summer’s GI Hopeful S. winner, could be primed to pounce third off the layoff if he starts as expected in the Blue Grass S. Trainer Steve Asmussen told DRF.com last week that the prospect of some extra time between starts and a desire to keep this $150,000 KEESEP bay in two-turn races as the chief reasons he did not enter the Belmont S. on Saturday. After not starting between September and March because of a right hind ankle issue, this Liam’s Map colt has been third and second behind two Bob Baffert-trained winning faves in Oaklawn stakes. Most recently Basin was five lengths in the wake of now-sidelined Charlatan (Speightstown) in the division of the Arkansas Derby that produced faster internal fractions but a slower final eighth and final time. Basin is a May 12 foal, so his next start will be the first after his actual third birthdate.

10) SOLE VOLANTE (g, Karakontie {Jpn}Light Blow, by Kingmambo)
O-Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, Andie Biancone & Limelight Stables Corp. B-Flaxman Holdings Limited (KY). T-Patrick Biancone. Sales History: $6,000 yrl ’18 KEESEP; $20,000 2yo ’19 OBSAPR. Lifetime Record: GSW, 7-4-1-1, $323,310.
Last Start: 6th GI Belmont S., BEL, June 20
Accomplishments Include: 1st GIII Sam F. Davis S., TAM, Feb. 8, 1st Pulpit S., GP, Nov. 30, 2nd GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby, TAM, Mar. 7.
Next Start: Uncommitted.
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 30.

Sole Volante’s non-threatening sixth in the Belmont S. was blah enough to derail him a few pegs within the Top 12, but a solid overall race resume saves this light-bodied deep closer from complete banishment off the list. Coming off a three-month layoff, this $6,000 KEESEP and $20,000 OBSAPR Karakontie (JPN) gelding had a winning allowance prep at Gulfstream 10 days prior to his trip to New York. But he never looked in it to win it on Saturday despite getting a robust pace that should have greatly aided his off-the-tailgate style. Trainer Patrick Biancone previously described Sole Volante as having the mind and athletic prowess to be able to adapt to different racing surfaces. But Biancone told DRF.com on Sunday the gelding didn’t handle the track at Belmont. Sole Volante’s second in the GII Tampa Bay Derby is quite a bit better than it looks on paper considering he closed from 11th on a day when the six dirt races at Tampa were all won by forwardly placed speedsters.

11) MAX PLAYER (c, Honor CodeFools in Love, by Not For Love)
O-George E. Hall & SportBLX Thoroughbreds Corp. B-K&G Stables (KY). T-Linda Rice. Sales History: $150,000 RNA yrl ’18 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: GSW & GISP, 4-2-1-1, $273,500.
Last Start: 3rd GI Belmont S., BEL, June 20
Accomplishments Include: 1st GIII Withers S., AQU, Feb. 1
Next Start: Uncommitted.
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 40.

Yes, Max Player’s third in the Belmont S. does have a “picked up the pieces” aura to it. But he’s a fresh face coming off a 4 1/2-month layoff, and that still was a pretty nice sustained run he uncorked from the back of the pack. It included a bit of maneuvering for position entering the turn and then having to switch outside charging into the lane. The honest pace established by the frontrunners certainly set up that type of move, but neither second-place finisher Dr Post nor Max Player were seriously threatening Tiz the Law. But what happens in the “race within the race” can be beneficial too, and this $150,000 KEESEP RNA will be a better Derby candidate for the experience. Trainer Linda Rice told TDN‘s Christie DeBernardis last week that Max was “a bit of an enigma” at age two whose progress over time has been “slow and steady.” On Sunday, Rice said a decision on a next start would be a week or 10 days away.

12) STORM THE COURT (c, Court Vision–My Tejana Storm, by Tejano Run)
O-Exline-Border Racing LLC, David Bernsen, Susanna Wilson & Dan Hudock. B-Stepping Stone Farm (Ky). T-Peter Eurton. Sales History: $5,000 yrl ’18 FTKFEB; $60,000 2yo ’19 OBSAPR. Lifetime Record: Ch. 2yo Colt & GISW, 7-2-0-2, $1,235,451.
Last Start: 6th GI Arkansas Derby, OP, May 2
Accomplishments Include: 1st GI TVG Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, SA, Nov. 1, 3rd GII San Felipe S., SA, Feb. 9
Next Start: GIII Ohio Derby, TDN, June 27
Equineline PPs. KY Derby Points: 32.

The 2-year-old champ and 45-1 upset winner of the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile has been luckless in three starts as a sophomore and will venture to Thistledown for the GIII Ohio Derby this Saturday in search of a turnaround. This $60,000 OBSAPR bay (bought for $5,000 as a FTKFEB yearling) was only peripherally involved when fourth in the GII San Vicente S. and wasn’t in the bridle when third behind heavyweights Authentic and Honor A.P. in the San Felipe S. He loomed but never fired when sixth in the stronger/faster division of the Arkansas Derby, and trainer Peter Eurton told DRF.com last week that blinkers would come off at Thistledown for the first time since Storm the Court ran third in the GI American Pharoah S. at Santa Anita last September. “He’s matured enough now,” Eurton said. For a $500,000 race, the Ohio Derby is currently lacking a headline horse and Storm the Court might end up being it. In six career races, this Court Vision colt has never started favored.

The post The TDN Derby Top 12 for June 23 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Former Navarro, Servis Horses Back in Winner’s Circle

When Note to Selfie (Big Drama) showed up in the seventh race last Wednesday at Gulfstream, many handicappers surely dismissed the $8,000 claimer. In her most recent start, she finished a non-threatening sixth at the same $8,000 claiming level Feb. 16, and that was for trainer Jorge Navarro. Since that race, Navarro was indicted for allegedly using performance-enhancing drugs on virtually every horse he started. If Note to Selfie couldn’t win for Navarro, how would she do for her new trainer, Elizabeth Dobles? Dobles is competent, but has never produced the kind of too-good-to-be-true results Navarro did before his career was halted by an FBI investigation.

“Of course, I thought the horse was going to run worse,” Dobles said. “I didn’t think she was going to win by any means. I wanted to use the race to gauge where we were at. It was a starting point. If she didn’t hit the board, I would have dropped her down. If she ran ok, maybe second or third, I was going to keep her at the same claiming level.”

Dobles got her answer. Note to Selfie won by a nose and paid $24.40. She ran a 56 Beyer. In three starts after Navarro claimed the filly from Scott Gelner, her Beyer numbers were 50, 42, 48.

And Note to Selfie is not an outlier. Rather, she represents a surprising pattern, that many of the horses that had been trained Navarro or Jason Servis, who was also indicted for doping, that have resurfaced are showing no signs of having regressed for their new connections.

With Equibase providing the data, the TDN studied 39 horses that had been in the barns of Servis or Navarro when they were indicted. The horse had to have raced for either trainer at some point from Jan. 1 on and then return for a new trainer between May 18 and June 17.

Twenty-three horses that were trained by Navarro have run back and four have won in their first start for their new stables and 12 have finished in the money. Sixteen horses that had started for Servis have run back, three have won and nine have finished in the money. Combining the stats for the two trainers, seven of 39 starters have won for a rate of 17.9%. Twenty-one of 39, or 53.8%, have finished in the money.

The Beyer figures also show surprising results.

Among the former Navarro horses that have run back, 10 have run faster, 10 have run slower and the figure for one horse was the same for both races. As for Servis, six show improved Beyer numbers and 10 ran a slower number.

Excluding horses that switched surfaces, 16 former Navarro horses have run back and, on average, they ran 2.5 Beyer numbers faster for their trainers than they did in their last start for Navarro. Using the same criteria for the Servis horses, they declined, on average, by 7.16 Beyer points.

There is a similar pattern on the Thorograph sheets.

“So far there hasn’t been much difference in their figures before and after, but it’s early,” said Thorograph owner Jerry Brown.

Some trainers had little problem getting the horses to maintain their form. Todd Pletcher received eight horses that had been trained by Navarro and had run four through June 17. Three have won and a fourth ran second. Kelly Breen hasn’t been as fortunate. He has gone one for five with former Servis horses and four have finished out of the money. That includes former Servis-trainee Firenze Fire (Poseidon’s Warrior). A Grade I winner, he was a lackluster fourth in the GI Carter H., beaten 12 1/4 lengths. He ran an 86 Beyer in the Carter after running a 102 in his last start for Servis.

Trainer Terri Pompay has claimed two horses off Navarro since December, with very different results. That has given her some insights into the Navarro program.

Navarro claimed Cool Arrow (Into Mischief) off of Pompay for $62,500 Dec. 27, in a winning effort. The horse resurfaced Feb. 7 for his new trainer and ran a poor fifth for $62,500. Pompay claimed him back and, since, the horse has been much better than the one Navarro ran for the one start. Cool Arrow ran a good fourth in his first start for Pompay and then won a $62,500 claimer Sunday at Gulfstream. After running a 72 Beyer for Navarro, the horse has turned in Beyer figures of 92 and 93.

Pompay believes that the Navarro training routine did not fit this particular horse.

“I wasn’t really nervous about claiming him back because I didn’t think he had him long enough for there to be a problem,” she said. “When I got the horse back he was really thin. I just think he trained him a lot harder than we did. I don’t know what else was going on. He came back and didn’t look like the same horse. Whatever his program was, that horse did not do well in it. I don’t know if he injected him or not. I do know that he’s a big horse who likes to carry a little weight on him. I think they did too much with him.”

She wasn’t nearly as fortunate with Benefactor (More Than Ready). She claimed him off Navarro for $62,500 Jan. 23 at Gulfstream, and the horse ran second that day. Pompay has run him back four times since. He has not finished in the money and has lost those starts by a combined 70 3/4 lengths. On Saturday at Gulfstream, he finished eighth and last, beaten 24 3/4 lengths, in a $30,000 claimer.

“He is sound but just has not run for me,” Pompay said. “We have run him back a few times and he never picks up his feet. We can’t find anything to fix and there isn’t anything obvious to tell us why he isn’t running better. He trains ok in the morning, but in his races he just doesn’t have the fire he used to have. Is it just that he’s run and run over the past couple of years before I got him and he is on the downside of his career? Or is it for other reasons? That’s something we are never going to know.”

There will be more tests to come for the Navarro and Servis horses. All eyes will be on Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) when he makes his return to the races for new trainer Bob Baffert. He was widely considered the best horse in training and if he cannot come back and win at the Grade I level there will be plenty of finger pointing.

After the indictments came out Mar. 9, Gulfstream announced that any horse that had been trained by Servis or Navarro could not run for 60 days and could only come back after working before a vet and undergoing tests to declare whether they had any drugs remaining in their system. More than 100 horses were involved and that, as of, June 17, only 39 horses had run back might be significant. Where are the other 61-plus horses and could their trainers be having a difficult time getting them back to the races?

Those answers may be months away. For now, based on the data that is available, horses coming out of the Servis and Navarro barns don’t seem to be having much of a problem maintaining their form.

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Oleksandra To Remain in New York

Team Valor International’s Oleksandra (Aus) (Animal Kingdom), who came from last to defeat a field of males in Saturday’s GI Jaipur S. at Belmont, will not return to trainer Neil Drysdale’s Southern California base and will instead remain in New York. The Southern Hemisphere-bred 5-year-old sustained a nick on a lower front limb after eventual runner-up Kanthaka (Jimmy Creed) made contact with her at the break, but is in “good shape” otherwise, according to a release from Team Valor’s Barry Irwin.

Oleksandra, who became the first Australian-bred Grade I winner in the U.S. since the pattern race scheme came into effect in 1974, will train at Belmont Park, with the GIII Troy S. at Saratoga the next objective. According to the release she will have one additional start prior to the GI Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint, for which the Jaipur was a ‘Win and You’re In’ qualifier. Oleksandra was not an original nominee to the Breeders’ Cup, but was supplemented last week. She will then be offered at public auction.

“That will be her last race for Team Valor,” Irwin said. “She will be offered for sale after the Breeders’ Cup at an auction in Kentucky with an as-yet undetermined agent.”

Irwin said that Oleksandra has already received an invitation from the Hong Kong Jockey Club’s Bill Nader to participate in the G1 Longines Hong Kong Sprint in December and that her new owner could elect to run in that spot or in the 2021 G1 Al Quoz Sprint before sending her off to stud.

Oleksandra received a Beyer Speed Figure of 101 for the Jaipur.

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What’s in a Name: Gamine

GAMINE is “a girl with a mischievous, boyish charm,” according to Google Dictionary. It is therefore a fitting name for the terrific filly by Into Mischief who dominated her fellow females in the GI Acorn S. at Belmont Saturday.

GAMINE, 120, f, 3, by Into Mischief
                1st Dam: Peggy Jane (SP, $102,050), by Kafwain
                2nd Dam: Seattle Splash, by Chief Seattle
                3rd Dam: Grand Splash, by Bucksplasher

An Italian native, Andrea Branchini now lives in Lexington, Ky. where he works in the equine transport industry.

 

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