Blanford Has High Hopes for Crabs N Beer

When Crabs N Beer (Blofeld) goes postward against 10 foes in the James W. Murphy S. at Pimlico, he will carry the hopes of small breeders everywhere onto the big stage of the GI Preakness S. undercard Saturday. The 3-year-old gelding is owned by native Marylander Chas Blanford, who has been in the business just six years after taking over the Riders Up Farm of longtime breeder William Fossett. Blanford maintains a broodmare band of five and is dreaming of a first stakes win.

“Bill Fossett is not my biological father, he was a neighbor and I was a kid who didn't have a steady father in my life,” Blanford recalled of his early interest in racing. “So he took me under his wing. He had lots of racehorses for over 50 years and he was thinking about selling the farm because he couldn't handle it anymore. He's 90 years old now. So I just picked it up and ran with it.”

Blanford spent his high school years working on Standardbred farms, but he admitted of having Thoroughbreds, “It was always somewhat of a dream for me to do it.”

While his professional life led him to found Blanford's Tree Service, his mentor made sure horses were still part of his protégé's life.

“Five or six years ago, Bill Fossett gave me Go Get'm Irish (Kitalpha) and I bred her to Jump Start the first time, which produced a horse called One Slick Chick,” Blanford said. “She was a 2-year-old maiden special weight winner and a 3-year-old winner. She was my first homebred.”

One Slick Chick may have been Blanford's first winner, but she was the latest in a long line of Fossett horses.

“The bloodlines that Fossett had go back to a horse named No Fat Chicks (Spring Double), which is three generations,” Blanford said. “These bloodlines have been on this farm forever.”

For all its longevity, Blanford noticed an omission in the family history and it's become his passion to rectify it.

“They are all winners,” he said of the family. “They have a stakes wis at Saratoga over steeplechase with a horse named You the Man (Lear Fan), but nothing on the flat yet. That's what I need to push for. I need to get black-type into these horses. They are capable of doing it.”

Crabs N Beer, who is out of a granddaughter of No Fat Chicks, Get'm Up Pronto, was bred by Blanford's friend Kyle Horlacher.

“Kyle bought Get'm Up Pronto when Bill Fossett was retiring,” Blanford said. “He sent some horses to the sale, so Kyle bought Get'm Up Pronto out of the sale for $1,000 and he bred her to Great Notion. The first foal had bad ankles, so he got cold feet. He had [the mare's second foal] Double Fireball (Imagining) and he had Crabs N Beer. Crabs N Beer was not a very good-looking baby. He was going every which way you could think of. I told him I would take the mare back if he would send me the two babies with her. I gave him $3,000 for the package.”

The transaction was part of Blanford's dream of improving the families he had been entrusted with.

“In the back of my mind, I was thinking I was trying to get these bloodlines proven,” he said. “And that's what I did. I got Double Fireball to the races. She won at Delaware Park on the turf second time. I put her in a claiming race and she was claimed, but she is doing really well, which I am happy about. It's helping me.”

A two-time allowance winner since being claimed in 2021, Double Fireball was sixth in the Apr. 23 Dahlia S. at Laurel Park for Little Man Farm and trainer Anthony Aguirre, Jr.

Crabs N Beer, meanwhile, grew out of his awkward stage and became Blofeld's first winner when he romped home a front-running 9 3/4-length victor while facing maiden-claimer company at Delaware Park last October in his fourth career start. But the win almost didn't happen in Blanford's colors.

“I was getting a little discouraged last year,” Blanford admitted. “Crabs N Beer wasn't doing any good at Delaware. I told [trainer] Jamie [Ness] to drop him in at Timonium for $10,000. And he told me no. It's a lot of money–I don't have deep pockets–but we waited five weeks and he went out and put up what I was told was the fastest maiden race last year at Delaware Park. He put up the fastest time and won it by nine lengths.”

Crabs N Beer has hit the board in six starts since breaking his maiden, including a late-running win against state-bred optional claimers at Laurel while making his turf debut Apr. 16. His lone off-the-board finish came when seventh in the Maryland Juvenile Championship last December.

The gelding, who is 12-1 on the morning line, faces a tough task against an accomplished field in the turfy one-mile James Murphy S. Should he happen to win, he wouldn't be just Blanford's first stakes winner.

“I have not had a stakes winner,” he confirmed. “I've not even had an open allowance or state-bred allowance winner. But I know someone who bred 20 horses and they only had one winner. Everything I've put into the races has won so far. I've bred five or six–One Slick Chick, One Slick Start, Double Fireball, Crabs n Beer, they have all won. They are all our bloodlines.”

The family already has a winner on Preakness weekend after Uncle Irish (Uncle Lino), a son of Go Get'm Irish, romped home a 6 1/4-length allowance winner at Pimlico Friday.

What would a stakes win on Maryland's biggest racing day mean to the 41-year-old native of Cecil County?

His voice filled with emotion, Blanford said, “Everybody is going to hear me.”

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Dinner Party Goes Through Cox, Maker

Between them, trainers Brad Cox and Mike Maker have won the two most recent runnings of the GII Dinner Party (ex Dixie S.) on the Preakness S. undercard and the accomplished conditioners look to have Saturday's renewal surrounded as well.

The reigning Eclipse Award winner Cox is represented by Juddmonte's Set Piece (GB) (Dansili {GB}), who was rerouted to this spot after scratching from a potential defense of his title in the May 5 Opening Verse S. at Churchill Downs. Winner of that track's GII Wise Dan S. last June, the homebred was runner-up in the GI Fourstardave H. at the Spa in August and most recently raced a bit freely when seventh first off a September layoff in the GI Maker's Mark Mile at Keeneland Apr. 15. Cox saddled Factor This (The Factor) to take the 2020 Dinner Party.

Maker sent out Somelikeithotbrown (Big Brown) to score last year and tightens the girth around Three Diamonds Farm's Atone (Into Mischief) here. Second in last year's GII Fort Lauderdale S. at Gulfstream Dec. 18, the bay gelding was beaten less than two lengths into fourth behind Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) in the GI Pegasus World Cup Turf Jan. 29 and fought on bravely to finish just a length off Shirl's Speight (Speightstown) when completing the super in the Maker's Mark.

Beacon Hill (Blame) looms an intriguing alternative to the top two choices off an Apr. 20 allowance effort at Keeneland in which he lagged back, came wide with what appeared to be a winning bid, but lugged in on multiple occasions and lost a bob. Joel Rosario sees fit to hop back aboard.

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Preakness Full Circle Moments

BALTIMORE, MD–Every year, a new batch of sophomores converges upon Pimlico Race Course. And while the names of the contenders is ever changing, the people behind them are remain fairly consistent. Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas casts a very long shadow in the second jewel in the Triple Crown, having won it on six prior occasions. From his first Preakness victory with Codex in 1980, Lukas has gone on to add wins with Tank's Prospect (1985), Tabasco Cat (1994), Timber Country (1995), Charismatic (1999) and Oxbow (2013).

One more win would put him on even terms with R. Wydham Walden and Bob Baffert, who each hold the record with seven Preakness titles. Coincidentally, Lukas's chance to tie Baffert with a record seventh win comes in the form of Secret Oath, a daughter of the late Arrogate, who was trained by Baffert. A homebred for Briland Farm, the chestnut is out of MSW and MGISP Absinthe Minded (Quiet American), who was also conditioned by Lukas. A winner of two of four starts at two, Secret Oath aired at Oaklawn in her first two starts at three, including the Feb. 26 GIII Honeybee S. before finishing a troubled-trip third in the GI Arkansas Derby Apr. 2.

“We didn't get a smooth trip, which we needed in a race of that caliber,” he said. “We also had some questionable decisions being made as the race unfolded. Those two things in combination probably cost her the race. I thought she was clearly the best horse in the race.”

Sent off at 4-1 in a salty renewal of the May 6 GI Kentucky Oaks that included champion juvenile filly Echo Zulu (Gun Runner) and GISW Nest (Curlin), Secret Oath drew off to win by a definitive two-length margin over Nest, with the champion back in fourth.

Lukas continued, “[The Arkansas Derby] didn't work out very well for us, but we had a five-week window [to the Oaks] and that just came together. Now, we're looking at a two-week window.”

“The Oaks was a tell-tale race for us,” said Lukas. “We never considered the Kentucky Derby when we ran against the colts in Arkansas, but we kind of had the Preakness on the radar.”

Following a similar approach to previous Preakness incursions, Lukas's three-horse contingent of Secret Oath and Ethereal Road (Quality Road) (and the barn pony Riff) arrived from the Churchill Downs base of operations following a 12-hour ride on a luxury equine transport.

However, despite the travel and activity since her arrival in Baltimore, the filly appears to have taken everything in stride.

“She's very professional,” affirmed Lukas. “She's gotten into a rhythm here with all the excitement and the media and it can be very disruptive to a horse, but she has handled that very well.”

“I think she's probably as good or maybe even a bit better than she was going into the Kentucky Oaks. I'd like to see her run the same race as she ran in the Oaks. Pick them off down the back side, be in contention at the top of the stretch and run right by them.”

Looking to stand in Lukas's way Saturday is Winchell Thoroughbreds' Epicenter (Not This Time), trained by Steve Asmussen. Adding an unexpected twist to the Triple Crown plot, the 4-1 Derby favorite was stymied by longshot winner Rick Strike (Keen Ice), who drew in off the also-eligible list following the scratch of Lukas's Ethereal Road on the eve of the race. And while the 11th-hour change up made for added drama and good press, it didn't really work out that well for Asmussen.

However, Asmussen proved philosophical about the Lukas scratch that ultimately dashed his Derby aspirations.

“Wayne is a very special person in racing,” said Asmussen, who is a two-time Preakness winner with Curlin in 2007 and Rachel Alexandra in 2009. “He's beyond iconic. Everything he has accomplished and continues to. It's a lot to go up against. He's inspirational.”

Victorious in last season's Gun Runner S., Epicenter finished runner-up in the Jan. 22 Lecomte S. at the Fair Grounds before bouncing back to score in the Feb. 19 GII Risen Star S. and GII Louisiana Derby Mar. 26.

Despite the last-out defeat, the colt's owner Ron Winchell remains upbeat about the colt's chances in the second jewel of the Triple Crown.

“I don't think the confidence level [in him has] changed, he ran a great race [in the Derby],” he said. “If he shows up and runs, we should be in great shape.”

Asked how he'd like to see things unfold Saturday, Winchell explained, “He's a very versatile horse. I anticipate we'll sit off the pace. I didn't think there is a different strategy. That's the nice thing about bringing a type of horse that has options. And he's got options.”

In contrast, when asked where he wants to see his charge in the race, Asmussen quipped, “In front at the wire. We handled everything else last time, how about we just worry about the wire.”

Representing the X-factor in this season's Preakness is Fern Circle Stables, Black Racing and Magdalena Racing's Creative Minister (Creative Cause). The grey, who was supplemented to the race for $150,000, is trained by Kenny McPeek,  who earned his sole Preakness victory with a filly, Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil), in the pandemic-postponed 2020 renewal.

The lightly raced colt was runner-up in his Gulfstream debut going seven panels in March and appeared to appreciate the step up to 1 1/16-miles for his Keeneland graduation Apr. 9. He handled the latest question with aplomb, taking a Churchill optional claimer May 7.

“What is it Wayne Gretzky said? 'You never make a shot you don't take,'” he said. “I've taken a couple of them and hit it, between [2002 Belmont winner] Sarava and Swiss.”

He continued, “Look, that's the fun of the sport. It's great being involved in these kinds of things. If you feel like you've got a legitimate chance to just hit the board, you can't be scared, because a lot happens.”

Also trying to repeat past exploits, trainer Chad Brown tries to add another Preakness title with Klaravich Stables' Early Voting (Gun Runner). The winner of his first two starts at Aqueduct, including an emphatic win in the GIII Withers S., the dark bay was caught late by Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo), finishing a neck back in second in the Apr. 9 GII Wood Memorial S.

In addition to Epicenter, Taylor Made Stallions' Not This Time is also represented by GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S. winner Simplification. Third in the Apr. 2 GI Florida Derby, the Antonio Sano trainee finished fourth in the Kentucky Derby.

“In the Florida Derby, he was too close to the pace,” explained Sano. “In the [Kentucky] Derby, I wanted him to relax, but he was too far back.”

John Velazquez takes over riding duties from Jose Ortiz, who sticks with Early Voting.

Calumet Farm's Happy Jack (Oxbow) will try to give his sire the Preakness double. In another connection between competitors, the Calumet stallion won the 2013 edition of the Preakness under the guidance of Lukas. A debut winner at Santa Anita in January, the bay later finished third in GII San Felipe S. and GI Santa Anita Derby before coming home in 14th in the Derby.

“He is fit and he is ready,” said Doug O'Neill, who previously won with I'll Have Another in 2012. “He is an ideal candidate to run back in two weeks. If you have a strong individual, it can be a real easy jump going from the Derby to the Preakness. I think he looks phenomenal. He was bucking and playing and walking the shed row Thursday afternoon and showed good energy on the track [Friday]. He seems like he is the best version of Happy Jack right now.”

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Asmussen Seeks Sixth Chick Lang Win

Steve Asmussen looks to take his sixth renewal of the GIII Chick Lang S.–and third straight–Saturday at Pimlico with Cogburn (Not This Time). Graduating at second asking at Churchill Downs in September, he kicked off his sophomore season on a winning note with a decisive optional claimer score at Oaklawn Mar. 25. He came up a neck short of re-opposing Whelen Springs (Street Sense) last time in that venue's Bachelor S. Apr. 30.

That Arkansas-bred rival took five tries to break his maiden, finally doing so against other locals in Hot Springs Mar. 26. He romped in the state-bred Rainbow S. there Apr. 9 and took the Bachelor just three weeks later.

Old Homestead (Overanalyze) looks to take his record to a perfect four-for-four in this event. Earning his diploma by 11 1/2 lengths at Delta Downs in January, the bay captured an allowance there next out Mar. 4. He took his show on the road and proved he could success at a top venue with a win in Keeneland's Lafayette S. Apr. 8.

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