Spot Plays at the Spa: Saturday, July 15

TDN's Senior Racing Editor Steve Sherack reveals a pair of selections for the first Saturday of the Saratoga meeting.

Race 1, Msw, $136k, 2yo, 5 1/2f, post time: 1:10 p.m. ET

There's every chance that National Treasure (Quality Road)'s half-brother and rail-drawn 4-5 morning-line favorite Pirate (Omaha Beach) turns out to be a complete monster, but I'll be taking a shot against him with fellow firster Special Element (Copper Bullet).

There's plenty of precocity in Special Element's pedigree. His freshman sire Copper Bullet, winner of the 2017 GII Saratoga Special S., is off and running with three winners and his dam It's High Time (Gone Astray) was a runaway 2-year-old spring winner at Gulfstream (and subsequent stakes winner) and her first foal Fourteeneightyfour (Straight Fire) also romped at first asking at two at Delaware.

Special Element brought $260,000 from Pin Oak Stud after a powerful-looking :10 breeze at OBS April. Hall of Famer Bill Mott's debuting 2-year-olds have come out firing so far at this meet with the very impressive debut winner Sugar Hi (Twirling Candy) on opening day and runner-up Book of Wisdom (Solomini) on Friday. Selection: #4 Special Element (7-2).

Race 3, Msw, $136k, 3yo/up, f/m, 1 1/16mT, 2:16 p.m. ET

Vanished (Speightstown) has run well enough to win in both of her prior efforts as the beaten favorite, including a debut second over the Churchill lawn May 13, and will be awfully tough to catch as the controlling speed in this big field beneath Luis Saez over the inner turf course. Her multiple stakes winning dam Elusive Pearl (Medaglia d'Oro) won the Riskaverse S. over the Saratoga lawn in 2011. Selection: #5 Vanished (3-1).

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Saturday Insights: Well-Related Pirate Figures Tough On Debut

1st-Saratoga, $136K, Msw, 2yo, 5 1/2f, post time: 1:10 p.m. ET
PIRATE (Omaha Beach) has been made the 4-5 morning-line favorite in the Saturday opener from the Spa and is bred to be any kind. The $350,000 Keeneland September acquisition by Starlight Racing and Harrell Ventures is the latest foal from Peter Blum's Treasure (Medaglia d'Oro), herself a debut second going this distance on Saratoga debut for Jimmy Jerkens in August 2014, who has since gone on to become a prized member of the Blum broodmare band. A mid-march foal, Pirate is a half-brother to the Starlight part-owned National Treasure (Quality Road), an impressive first-out winner over a sprint distance at Del Mar last September and better known for his gate-to-wire victory in the GI Preakness S. May 20. Treasure is also the dam of Ultimate (Speightstown), who most recently came from off the speed to take the Iowa Sprint S. at Prairie Meadows July 7. TJCIS PPs

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Summer Breezes: Saturday, July 15, 2023

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 attract 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. To follow are the horses entered for Saratoga and Ellis Park Saturday:

Saturday, July 15, 2023
Saratoga 1, $136k, 2yo, 5 1/2f, 1:10 p.m. ET
Horse (Sire), Sale, Price ($), Breeze
Arteta (Take Charge Indy), FTMMAY, 170,000, see below
C-White Pine Thoroughbreds, agent; B-Kerri Radcliffe, agent
Saisir Le Jour (Arrogate), OBSMAR, 55,000 (PS), click
C-Eddie Woods, Agent; B-Richie's World Stable LLC
Special Element (Copper Bullet), OBSAPR, 260,000, click
C-Envision Equine, agent; B-Pin Oak Stud

 

 

Ellis 3, $70k, 2yo, 5 1/2fT, 1:43 p.m. ET
McVicker (World of Trouble), OBSMAR, 20,000, click
C-Longoria Training & Sales, Agent; B-Marsico Brothers Racing
Rapid Grey (Constitution), OBSAPR, 160,000, click
C-GOP Racing Stable Corp; B-TMC

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After A Chilly Reception From Stallion Farms, Rombauer Is Making His Way Back To The Races

Back in early 2022 when John and Diane Fradkin announced that their homebred GI Preakness winner Rombauer (Twirling Candy) was being retired after suffering a soft tissue injury they went to work to find him his new home. The horse has a good pedigree and is a Grade I winner, so the expectations were that he'd stand at stud in Kentucky. Regional markets were also considered. Another option was Japan. But no matter where their horse might land, the Fradkins decided that Rombauer's racing career was over.

That was the plan, until the plan went awry. Rombauer's current home is not in Central Kentucky but in South Florida. Based at Gulfstream Park for trainer Saffie Joseph Jr., Rombauer is in training and could make his next start some time next month. He has not raced since finishing third more than two years ago in the 2021 GI Belmont S.

“I never expected this,” John Fradkin said.

The calls began after the decision was made to retire Rombauer and the Fradkins reached out to all the usual suspects. While they were willing to listen to any offers, they felt their horse had done enough to have earned the right to stand in Kentucky. He had also won the El Camino Real Derby and finished second in the GI American Pharoah S. and third in the GII Blue Grass S. while earning $1,040,500. He was a winner on dirt, turf and synthetic. Those are solid credentials, but the Kentucky farms weren't sold.

“The only real market in this country is Kentucky and Kentucky wasn't interested in him, which shocked me,” Fradkin said. “I never received a real offer in writing at any price. I did offer the horse to several places for what I thought was a spectacular deal, where they would almost be guaranteed to get their money back in one year, and they still didn't take it.”

The Japanese weren't interested, either, Fradkin said. He might have been able to find a farm outside of Kentucky to take Rombauer, but he didn't aggressively pursue that avenue. Whether it was from Kentucky, Japan, New York, California, Maryland, Fradkin said he never received an official offer in writing for the horse from anyone.

“The plan was to have him stand in Kentucky,” Fradkin said. “Plan B was Japan. Plan C was to run him again, and that's what we are doing. To borrow a quote from Jena Antonucci, 'when there's no seat at the table, you have to build your own table.'”

Fradkin admits that not everyone among the group that teamed up to win the Preakness was on board with the comeback. Rombauer was trained by Michael McCarthy and the Fradkins offered to give him the horse back. He declined.

“Michael wasn't that receptive to training him for a comeback,” Fradkin said. “His exact comment was that he had done enough and should be a stallion. I don't disagree with that, but the stallion farms weren't interested in him. We couldn't force them to take the horse. Michael is a conservative guy and I respect that. He just didn't want to be responsible if something goes wrong.  I have two trainers and Saffie is my East Coast trainer. Saffie was up for it. So he's with Saffie now.”

After the Belmont, Rombauer was training at Del Mar and the Fradkins were looking at races like the GI Haskell S. and the GI Travers S. After McCarthy expressed concerns that the horse wasn't 100 percent, they gave him 90 days off. Back in training and gearing up for a 4-year-old campaign, Rombauer suffered the soft tissue injury and the decision was made to retire him.

After deciding to regroup because of the lack of interest from the stallion farms, the Fradkins put Rombauer back into light training at WinStar Farm on Dec. 1. The next stop was Ocala and from there he went to Joseph's barn at Gulfstream, where he arrived in mid-June. He has had two official workouts for Joseph, both at three furlongs. Fradkin is thrilled with how the horse is doing.

“Rombauer is happy and thriving at the racetrack,” he said. “I am sure that he enjoys being back in training.”

Should Rombauer make it back to the races in August that will mean a gap of about 26 months between races. Fradkin believes it's an obstacle he can overcome.

“The world is going to get to see a bigger, faster version of Rombauer,” he said. “One thing people may remember about him is that in his moment of glory in the Preakness he looked like this little horse galloping by these much bigger horses. I think people will be surprised by how big he is now. It's not for sure that we'll make it back. Things could always go wrong. But if he makes it back he's going to make it back at a high level.”

For the Fradkins, the ideal scenario would be for the now 5-year-old to win some major races during his comeback, to do enough that next time around the major Kentucky stallion farms will come knocking on their door. If not, Fradkin is confident he will be able to work out a deal with a farm in another state.

“He will be a stallion some day,” he said. “So far as where, we'll just have to see how things turn out. In the meantime, we're ready to try him on the big stage once again.”

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