Weekly Stewards and Commissions Rulings Sept. 27-Oct. 3

Every week, the TDN publishes a roundup of key official rulings from the primary tracks within the four major racing jurisdictions of California, New York, Florida and Kentucky.

Here's a primer on how each of these jurisdictions adjudicates different offenses, what they make public (or not) and where.

With the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) having gone into effect on July 1, the TDN will also post a roundup of the relevant HISA-related rulings from the same week.

California:
Track: Los Alamitos
Date: 10/02/2022
Licensee: Juan Hernandez, jockey
Penalty: One-day suspension, $278 fine
Violation: Excessive use of the whip
Explainer: Having violated the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2280 (Use of Riding Crop) and pursuant to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties – Class 3), Jockey Juan Hernandez, who rode COUNTRY GRAMMER in the eighth race at Santa Anita Park on October 1, 2022, is suspended for one (1) day (October 9, 2022), and fined $278.00 (10% of jockey's portion of the purse) for one (1) strike over the limit. Furthermore, Jockey Juan Hernandez is assigned three (3) violation points that will be expunged on April 2, 2023, six (6) months from the date of final adjudication pursuant to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority Rule #2282 (Riding Crop Violations and Penalties. Jockey Juan Hernandez has accrued a total of six (6) points.

Florida:
The following was reported on the Association for Racing Commissioners International's recent rulings website.
Track: Gulfstream Park
Date: 10/05/2022
Licensee: Herbert Miller, trainer
Penalty: $1,000 fine
Violation: Medication violation
Explainer: STEWARD'S RULING FINAL ORDER # 2022-037344 – F.S. 550.2415 = METHOCARBAMOL. $1000 FINE IMPOSED AND DUE 10/20/22 TO GULFSTREAM PARK HORSEMENS BOOKKEEPER. LOSS OF PURSE IMPOSED ALSO. “I'LL FIGURE IT OUT”

Track: Gulfstream Park
Date: 10/05/2022
Licensee: Lis Duco, trainer
Penalty: $1,000 fine
Violation: Medication violation
Explainer: STEWARD'S RULING FINAL ORDER # 2022-037253 – F.S. 550.2415 VIOLATION = TRANEXAMIC ACID. $1000 FINE IMPOSED AND DUE 10/20/22 TO GULFSTREAM PARK HORSEMENS BOOKKEEPER. LOSS OF PURSE ALSO IMPOSED. “AMOR LEJANO”

Kentucky:
Track: Churchill Downs
Date: 10/01/2022
Licensee: Keith York, owner-trainer
Penalty: Suspended license
Violation: Disorderly conduct
Explainer: Keith York is hereby suspended for disorderly conduct and his formal rejection from Ellis Park that occurred on September 29, 2022.

Track: Churchill Downs
Date: 10/02/2022
Licensee: Sonny Leon, jockey
Penalty: 15-day suspension
Violation: Intentional attempt to interfere during racing
Explainer: After being represented at a hearing before the Board of Stewards, Sonny R Leon, who rode Rich Strike in the tenth race at Keeneland on Oct. 1, 2022, is hereby suspended 15 racing days, October 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26, 27, 28, and October 29, 2022, for intentionally attempting to interfere with and impede the progress of a rival by repeatedly making physical contact with another rider into the stretch.

NEW HISA STEWARDS RULINGS
Note: While HISA has shared these rulings over the past week, some of them originate from prior weeks.

Violations of Crop Rule:
Albuquerque Downs
Luis Ramon Rodriguez–ruling date September 18, 2022
Alejandro Medellin–ruling date October 1, 2022
Miguel Angel Perez–ruling date October 1, 2022

Aqueduct
Manny Franco–ruling date September 29, 2022
Jose Ortiz–ruling date September 29, 2022
Jose Lezcano–ruling date September 30, 2022

Churchill Downs
Jose Riquelme–ruling date September 25, 2022
Edgar Moorales–ruling date September 25, 2022
Joseph Talamo–ruling date September 25, 2022
Joseph Rocco, Jr.–ruling date September 30, 2022
Corey Lanerie–ruling date October 2, 2022

Delaware Park
Carlos Eduardo Lopez–ruling date October 1, 2022
Prairie Meadows
Cassidy Fletcher–ruling date October 2, 2022

Remington Park
Erick Medellin–ruling date September 28, 2022
Presque Isle Downs
Helen Alice Beckman–ruling date September 28, 2022
Eduardo Rojas–ruling date September 30, 2022

Voided Claims
Churchill Downs
Violent Gigi–ruling date September 21, 2022
Beverly's Charge–ruling date September 21, 2022
Mine Own Star–ruling date September 25, 2022
Indimaaj–ruling date September 25, 2022
Supremacy – ruling date September 28, 2022

Horseshoe Indianapolis
Rio Lady–ruling date September 27, 2022

Violations Involving Forfeiture of Purse
Albuquerque Downs
Luis Ramon Rodriquez–$500 fine; 3-day suspension; 5 points; 7-day additional suspension due to accumulation of 11 HISA points

Appeal Request Updates
Albuquerque Downs

Luis Ramon Rodriquez
Crop rule violation
Ruling date September 18, 2022
Appeal filed September 28, 2022
Stay denied

Oscar Ceballos (rider of horse owned by Joseph Peacock, Jr.)
Crop rule violation
Ruling date September 25, 2022
Appeal filed October 3, 2022
Stay granted

The post Weekly Stewards and Commissions Rulings Sept. 27-Oct. 3 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Good Magic Blazing the Trail

First things first, because this was not just a proxy war. Congratulations, then, to Blazing Sevens (Good Magic) for carving his name on the GI Champagne S. roll of honor, one of the most storied on the American Turf. John and Carla Capek of Rodeo Creek Racing have only owned racehorses for a couple of years, but here they are with the winner of a race once won in three consecutive runnings by Seattle Slew, Alydar and Spectacular Bid. They must be tremendously excited as Chad Brown prepares their colt for the Breeders' Cup, with everything that entails in terms of the Triple Crown trail and a place at stud.

But this race was also notable for a “play within a play”. For the difference between first and second prizes was sufficient to elevate Good Magic past his GI Kentucky Derby nemesis Justify, sire of runner-up Verifying, in a highly competitive race for the first season stallions' championship.

We'll return to that table in due course but–whoever gains the final laurels–Good Magic is first of the cohort to put his name in lights with a Grade I winner. And that's especially important for a young stallion who was himself noted for greater precocity than has tended to be trademarked by his own sire Curlin.

Curiously, the horse that set up Saturday's race through the first three splits (before fading into fourth) happened to be a half-brother to Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior), who early in his colorful career thwarted none other than Good Magic by half a length in the 2017 running. Good Magic then broke his maiden in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile, an unprecedented distinction, and continued to progress as a sophomore. His endeavors, either side of running into Justify on the first Saturday in May, included wins in the GII Blue Grass S. and the GI Haskell S. Despite derailing in the Travers, Good Magic retired to Hill 'n' Dale with $2,945,000 banked through nine starts.

Good Magic started out at a fee of $35,000, with the same kind of challenge–or opportunity–as that embraced by Vino Rosso and Known Agenda over the next couple of years: to stake a claim as the premier heir to their sire. In the current general sires' table, the highest earner by Curlin is Keen Ice, no higher than 48th despite the endeavors of Rich Strike. The unequivocal identification of a successor is one of few tasks remaining to Curlin, now approaching the evening of his career at 18, but Good Magic certainly had his three 'P's lined up as he set out: performance as already noted, while pedigree and physique had together seduced a $1-million bid from e Five Racing as a Keeneland September yearling.

Breeders Stonestreet were so reluctant to part with him, even at that price, that they struck a deal to stay aboard as partners. After all, he was by the horse that had made their colors famous, as a dual Horse of the Year, and out of a daughter of one of the first mares bought for the evolving Stonestreet program.

Good Magic's dam Glinda The Good was a dual stakes winner precocious enough to run third in the GII Pocahontas S. She was by Curlin's regular sophomore antagonist, Hard Spun, and one of no fewer than 14 winners–most notably the Grade III winner/Grade I-placed Take The Ribbon (Chaster House)–out of Magical Flash (Miswaki), already 14 years old when acquired for $140,000 at Keeneland's November Sale in 2004.

Magical Flash had been bred by the Californian Turf stalwart Clement L. Hirsch, and indeed shared a dam with Magical Maiden (Lord Avie), the dual Grade I winner whose daughter Miss Houdini (Belong To Me) and granddaughter Ce Ce (Elusive Quality) have both subsequently emulated her as a winner at the elite level for Hirsch's son Bo; not forgetting Ce Ce's aptly-named half-brother Papa Clem (Smart Strike), fourth in the GI Kentucky Derby after winning the GII Arkansas Derby.

Good Magic is one of several projects in which Barbara Banke has had the good sense to collaborate with John Sikura. Together with other shareholders, they have certainly given Good Magic every chance. He covered 306 mares across his first two seasons and held up well against the inevitable slide with 92 in his third. And his first yearlings were positively received in 2021, 94 sold from 110 offered for an average $151,708. (His most expensive yearling, a $775,000 Keeneland September colt, made a promising start when beaten a neck for a powerful partnership of Bob Baffert's patrons at Del Mar last month.)

As an unusually accomplished juvenile, by the standards of his sire, Good Magic's big pitch is that he might combine two-turn Classic quality with some extra commercial dash. His first winner admittedly came no earlier than June, but it's auspicious that Curly Jack has progressed to win the GIII Iroquois S. on his fourth start. Then there was Vegas Magic, who won her first three in California including the GII Sorrento S. And while Grade I level proved beyond her at this stage, that new pinnacle has now been scaled by Blazing Sevens.

Fast tracked from his debut success, Blazing Sevens did make the GI Hopeful S. podium but only at a respectful distance, beaten a dozen lengths by Forte (Violence). Brown remained adamant that he was better than he showed that day and, though alarmed by a similar slop last weekend, was vindicated with a strong-running exhibition that promised still better to come as he stretches out.

Blazing Sevens, bred by Tracy Farmer, is the first runner out of a Warrior's Reward half-sister (dual winner around a mile) to shock GI Jamaica H. winner King David (Hat Trick {Jpn}) besides a couple of other stakes operators. Otherwise it's a fairly thin pedigree so it already reflected well on Good Magic that he could be pinhooked as a $140,000 short yearling (sold to Chestnut Valley Farm through Denali at Keeneland January) to make $225,000 in the select catalogue (Eaton consignment) at Saratoga that summer.

If Blazing Sevens is indeed to thrive through a second turn, Good Magic will presumably be loading plenty of Curlin into the deal as the maternal family has recently been seeded largely by speed brands (Warrior's Reward, Gone West, Storm Bird). The third dam was a half-sister to an Epsom Derby runner-up in Glacial Storm, however, and while that horse was by a profound source of stamina (Arctic Tern), she herself introduces a sturdy distaff influence in Luthier (Fr) and there's actually a chain of stout influences tapering away behind her. If Brown believes this colt to be craving extra distance, then he's going to be right.

Regardless, the next step on his journey promises to be significant in the rookie sires' championship, where every cent looks likely to count. Through Monday, Good Magic held a narrow lead, at $1,521,469, over two others with still bigger debut crops in Justify ($1,468,689) and Bolt d'Oro ($1,460,457). Good Magic has certainly made his big punches count, his three graded stakes winners for now being his only stakes operators of any kind, compared with six and eight respectively for Justify (who also has three graded winners) and Bolt d'Oro (two). These are still very early days, of course, with this top trio so far mustering 15, 16 and 16 winners apiece from 47 (Good Magic, from 119 named foals), 43 (Justify, 137) and as many as 58 (Bolt d'Oro, 142) starters.

Looking at those ratios, the one who has shown least of his hand would appear to be a Triple Crown winner who famously never ran at all as a juvenile and whose prodigious physical prowess might validly require time to develop. Quite striking, then, that Justify came up with a filly to win a 5 1/2-furlong maiden in Ireland as early as May, who has since followed up at Group level. With a fee commensurate with his meteoric track career, Justify obviously faced plenty of pressure to match his name. But the foundations he has laid so far encourage the hope that his flourishing, speed-oriented sire line can balance the slower-maturing influences on his family (such as damsire Ghostzapper, plus Nijinsky top and bottom).

No less auspicious is the genetic profile of Bolt d'Oro. He was a remarkably accomplished juvenile (dual Grade I winner/103 Beyer) for a colt whose parents were respectively by El Prado (Ire) and A.P. Indy, and while his own sophomore career ultimately proved frustrating, he too can be expected to keep building from here. His second crop has been performing particularly well at the sales.

All three frontrunners, then, share a wholesome eligibility to keep building as their stock explores a second turn. In the meantime, however, Good Magic's studmate Army Mule is slipstreaming them with real verve in fourth ($1,362,132) in already fielding 45 of his 91 named foals for 17 winners including two in stakes company. That backs up his excellent sales debut last year, where he converted a $10,000 opening fee to a $91,809 average.

Another to have already fired half his (named) bullets is Sharp Azteca, whose 60 starters have yielded a class-high 22 winners, two at black-type level, for a bank of $1,244,681. And we've previously celebrated the breakout of Girvin, who went to war with 76 named foals, conceived in Florida at $6,000, but has already had three stakes winners from 13 overall (31 starters) for $1,160,669. That has earned him an immediate move to Kentucky and, though he has so far only offered four yearlings from his second crop, one has already made $290,000.

The next two in the table have not yet matched their sales performance but both remain well equipped to overtake some of the faster starters. Mendelssohn sent no fewer than 125 yearlings into the ring last year, processing 100 at $153,611, and 54 starters have so far yielded 16 winners for a bank of $946,423. It's only a matter of time before his cavalry starts to make a few headlines, and he can take heart from the example of City of Light ($886,216).

After his stellar auction debut (67 of 75 sold at an average of $337,698), City of Light–himself a fairly gradual bloom on the track himself–had to wait until July 31 for his first winner. Remarkably, however, three of his eight winners to date (from just 20 launched from 83 named foals) have already won stakes, while another was beaten a neck in the GIII With Anticipation S. With the lovely shape to his pedigree, City of Light will prove a perfect example of why nobody should be too carried away with these early skirmishes. I'm not the only one to think so, either, judging from his lucrative return to the sales through his second crop.

A final nod, for now, goes to Oscar Performance ($766,705) who has started 29 of 70 named foals for 11 winners with three already placed at graded stakes level.

All of these horses tend to be granted a ruthlessly narrow window by the commercial market. If many are initially oversubscribed, it's no more absurd for them to be abandoned so hastily. It can't be stressed enough that commercial breeders are themselves not to blame for such giddy imbalances, which hardly suit the stallion farms either. The fault, if any, rests with those directing ringside expenditure, who lock in a cycle that's hard to break: commercial breeders know that they must offer new sires, and as a result those sires will indeed have their best shot in their first books.

Now is surely way too soon for anybody to be leaping to any definitive conclusions. Inevitably, that won't stop some people prematurely writing off certain of the slower starters. That being so, you can't overstate the satisfaction for those standing the first of the intake to that Grade I breakout. Nonetheless, it remains neck and neck in the wider race, with everything still to play for. And if the stakes sometimes feel somewhat higher than perhaps they should be, that will hardly diminish excitement at several different farms about a sub-plot that could really enliven the closing months of the year.

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Offield Saddles a Final Winner–from the Hereafter

Statistically speaking, Northern Rose (Northern Causeway), a 6-year-old chestnut mare with a 4-for-32 claiming-level record, was hardly the star of the stable for trainer Duane Offield, who died Sept. 29 after a long fight with cancer. But the 82-year-old conditioner took an outsized shine to her anyway. A homebred for one of his most dedicated clients, Northern Rose had been in Offield's care since she began her career 3 1/2 years ago, and she enjoyed a prime stall under Offield's Golden Gate Fields shedrow, not far from his office so he could keep a watchful and prideful eye on her.

Offield, a kind-hearted and soft-spoken mainstay on the Northern California circuit for parts of seven decades, chiseled out a reputation as an old-ways trainer who preferred to let his horses do the talking for him. He probably would have downplayed it had he been alive to witness it, but the performance of Northern Rose in the third race at Golden Gate on Saturday spoke volumes in terms of good karma.

Northern Rose had been entered by Offield in the Oct. 1 $5,000 claiming route prior to his passing. He wasn't able to make it out to the track near the end of his life, but still looked forward to managing his horses. So when the darling of his barn charged home from the back of the pack to win by two lengths at 17-1, her score put a spiritual exclamation point on Offield's life as a horseman by giving him one final official victory after his death.

You could say that Northern Rose sent Offield out a winner. But those who knew him had long ago figured out Offield was all class, regardless of where his horses finished.

“I don't know that I've ever met anyone so selfless. He was a man from a different time. He just was the epitome of somebody who never put himself first,” Rozamund Barclay, Northern Rose's owner and breeder, told TDN a few hours after Saturday's emotional win.

“With Duane, everything was about the horses. It didn't matter if it was a $2,500 claimer or a stakes horse. They all got lots of attention. He felt very privileged that he got to make his living doing what he loved to do. He never forgot that. He was so grateful that his entire adult life, he got to do what he wanted–being with horses,” Barclay said.

“He loved his crew, too. That was his family. The same people worked for him for years. We were talking [Saturday] about an exercise rider, who, when he was 15 or 16, Duane helped him get special permission to gallop horses at that age. That exercise rider has got to be close to 60 now. Duane had that quality about him that made people want to work for him, and people stayed loyal and wanted to keep working for him.

Duane Offield | Vassar Photography

“He got so many young people to go through his barn. John Sadler worked for him. So did Kim and Sean McCarthy. There are probably a lot of people that worked for him that I'm not aware of. It's a rare person where nobody has anything negative to say about him,” Barclay said.

Barclay lives not far from Emerald Downs in Auburn, Washington, and also owns Northern Rose's sire, Northern Causeway. She keeps racetrack retirees at her home and her broodmares and Northern Causeway at Rancho San Miguel in California. She first began sending horses to Offield in 2014 after her previous California-based trainer took sick and recommended Offield as the person he'd want to look after his stock. Since then she's kept a stable of between 10 and 15 horses with Offield, and Barclay said they meshed well as owner and trainer because Offield treated her horses as individuals with their own development timetables.

“He liked the old-school ways. He liked horses to be hand-walked, a lot of hands-on attention, that kind of thing. And it's getting real hard to do that, as you well know. Trainers' expenses are going up and up and up, and owners can only afford to pay so much. So it's a lot to hand-walk all your horses, do them all up every day, all of that. But Duane seemed to manage to do that.”

Originally from Prosser, Washington, Offield studied animal husbandry at California State Polytechnic University prior to embarking on a racetrack career in the late 1960s, first with Quarter Horses and later Thoroughbreds. His lifetime statistics predate Equibase records that go back as far as 1976, but since that date Offield amassed 722 winners and just over $10 million in purse earnings.

Offield went nearly two decades into his career before he trained and owned a piece of a horse that might break through on the national scene as a Triple Crown candidate. In 1989, a raw speedster named Restless Con (Restless Native) won three of his first four races as a 2-year-old in NorCal. But the colt developed a life-threatening virus shortly after turning three that knocked him out of contention for the GI Kentucky Derby preps.

Offield nursed Restless Con back to health, and after winning two minor Golden Gate stakes and finishing second in the then-GII Ohio Derby, he ambitiously shipped the $17,000 KEESEP roan cross-country to Monmouth Park for the GI Haskell Invitational. Dismissed at 10-1 in the betting as a California speedball in a race laden with classy East Coast contenders, jockey Tim Doocy broke on top but then unexpectedly rated Restless Con off the pace, orchestrating a 2 1/4-length upset.

Restless Con then finished twelfth in the GI Travers S. and ninth in the then-GI Super Derby. Offield brought the colt back to his NorCal base, where Restless Con won only one more race before retiring in 1992. Offield might have pinned his hopes on developing additional top-level talent in the decades to come, but that Haskell win would stand as his one and only graded stakes victory.

Fast forward to this season. With Offield unable to attend to daily doings at the track because of his illness, his record slumped to 4-for-75 for the year going into last Saturday's race. As he knew his life was coming to a close, his concerns shifted from winning races to making sure his racetrack family was positioned to be taken care of once he died.

“That's the kind of person he was. It's kind of hard to explain,” Barclay said. “But one of the things that kept him going was that he had a wonderful crew that stayed in contact with him. He was bedridden towards the end, but he never stopped putting his energy into running the stable.

“Even the day he passed away, he was concerned about the welfare of his horses, especially some of the ones that he's campaigned for a long time, wanting to make sure they all went on to good careers. I think all horsemen try to do the best by the horses they train. But it was his nature to be more worried about the kids that worked for him and the horses than himself.”

Barclay said Northern Rose prefers running outside of horses, so it was a bit of a bummer when she drew the rail for the mile race. She added that Offield was not the type of trainer to over-instruct his riders, but she knew he would have told jockey Armando Ayuso to get to the outside for one clear stretch bid if possible, and those were the instructions given by assistant trainer Jorge Bautista when he gave a leg up to Ayuso on Saturday.

Northern Rose | Vassar Photography

Northern Rose broke to the back, settled on the inside and was content to stalk midpack in fifth before edging closer to the dueling leaders 4 1/2 furlongs out. She quickened her cadence through the far bend, and when Ayuso swung the mare out to the four path turning for home, Northern Rose responded gamely.

What was unfolding might not have immediately resonated with the general public. But Barclay said the backstretch folks watching from trackside knew what was in the making, and a noticeable buzz began to swell on the grandstand apron.

“Northern Rose outside has hit the lead coming to the sixteenth pole!” announcer Matt Dinerman intoned, punctuating his call with enthusiasm in deep stretch. “Northern Rose starting to open up on the competition for Duane Offield! And how about this? Northern Rose at 17-1!”

As Barclay put it, “If you were part of the backside community, you could hear the excitement when Northern Rose was coming down the stretch; even a little astonishment in Matt Dinerman's voice. And I think it just kind of made everybody's day.”

Asked what was going through her mind in the winner's circle ceremony, Barclay said the scene was a bit too emotional for her to put into words. Then she attempted to explain it anyway, her voice only briefly cracking with sentiment before continuing strongly.

“I can't tell you how well loved he was. Everybody on the backstretch knew Duane. Everybody on the racetrack knew if they needed help, that they could go to him. He just had that upbringing that you didn't deny someone any help if you were able to help them,” Barclay said.

While she was processing all of that after giving Northern Rose an affectionate rub on the nose and briefly hugging with Bautista, Ayuso and another member of Offield's team, Barclay said the phone rang near the weighing-in scale. The stewards wanted to speak with her, a racing official told Barclay, who said her first thought was, “What did I do now?”

The stewards, though, simply wanted to express a shared sense of wonderment at what had just transpired.

“The stewards were very sweet,” Barclay said. “They asked me, 'Wow, do you believe that?' And I said, 'No!' What a great sendoff for Duane. I can't think of a better sendoff. He was an extremely private person, but there was always that common thread–he loved the horses and everybody knew that,” Barclay said.

The post Offield Saddles a Final Winner–from the Hereafter appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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The Breeders’ Cup is Next for Iowa-Bred Sensation Tyler’s Tribe

After another dominating performance, this time in the Iowa Cradle S., the undefeated Iowa-bred gelding Tyler's Tribe (Sharp Azteca) will face the stiffest test of his career when going next in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint at Keeneland. Just don't call him an underdog. He's too fast for that.

“We're headed to Kentucky and I think we have a good horse,” said co-owner and trainer Tim Martin. “I know he's been running in Iowa but has been beating them pretty bad over there. He's been pretty amazing.”

The story of the over achieving Iowa-bred began when Martin and co-owner Tom Lepic bought the horse for $34,000 as a yearling at last year's Iowa Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association Fall Mixed Sale, not knowing at the time that Sharp Azteca would turn out to be one of the top freshman sires in the country. The hope was to get a productive Iowa-bred, but it was obvious early on that they got much more than just that. Tyler's Tribe, who is named for Lepic's grandson, who has been battling leukemia, won his first four starts by a combined 53 1/4 lengths during a streak that included a gaudy 94 Beyer figure when he beat open company in the Prairie Meadows Freshman S.

He has never run outside of Prairie Meadows, where Martin is third in the trainer's standings. The regular rider is Kylee Jordan, the leading rider at Prairie Meadows who only recently lost her apprentice allowance.

In Saturday's Iowa Cradle, which was restricted to Iowa-breds, Tyler's Tribe, a 1-20 favorite, won by 6 1/2 lengths. It was the smallest winning margin of his five-race career, but he was geared down in the stretch and was never at any point asked for his best.

That wasn't the plan. Martin wanted Tyler's Tribe to gallop out an extra two furlongs after the wire, but with Jordan all but pulling the horse up at the wire it didn't work out.

“She was supposed to go out a mile,” Martin said of Jordan. “I think there was a misunderstanding. She kind of saved him down the lane when I told her to keep riding him so he could go out a mile. She stood up on him and the horse thought he was done. So, I didn't like the gallop out. It wasn't the horse's fault.”

Martin has had his sights set on the Breeders' Cup for a while. The only question was whether or not they would try for the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile at a mile-and-a-sixteenth on the dirt or the Juvenile Turf at 5 1/2 furlongs on the grass. Neither is a perfect fit. Tyler's Tribe has never run on the grass, but neither has he ever run beyond six furlongs. Ultimately, Martin settled on the shorter race and the plan is to arrive at Keeneland on Tuesday so that he can adapt to his surroundings and get a chance to train over the turf course.

“He's a sprinter and I don't know if he's ready to go long yet,” Martin said. “I really think he will like the grass. His pedigree suggests he'll run well on the grass and he's got a sibling or two that has run well on the grass. I wish the race were on dirt because we know he likes the dirt. But at this point in his career I just don't know if he's ready for a mile-and-a-sixteenth race.”

Though Tyler's Tribe has been facing modest competition, he figures to be among the favorites in the Juvenile Turf. If that weren't the case, Martin said he wouldn't be taking the shot that he is.

“I don't want to go to the Breeders' Cup just to go to the Breeder's Cup,” he said. “I want to go when I know I have a shot to win a race or run a really big race. I'm not interested in going just to say that I had a horse in the Breeders' Cup. I think we have the horse to compete. He'll be one of the top horses in his race, He's five-for-five and has done it all easily.”

Martin does think his horse will eventually be able to succeed in two-turn races and hopes to give him that shot next year. But first the Breeders' Cup, where he will take on some of the fastest 2-year-olds on the planet. Is he up to the task? It's a fascinating question, and the answer awaits.

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