Slezak Hoping to Replicate Kentucky Derby Triumph

Michael Slezak may have been watching the Kentucky Derby alongside his 11-year-old twin boys from his living room in Jersey City, but he celebrated like he was about to receive the trophy himself when Rich Strike (Keen Ice) scored the second-largest upset in the race's 148-year history.

A former TVLine and Entertainment Weekly journalist, Slezak is now a full-time bloodstock agent who also dabbles in TV pilot script writing. One month and a day before Rich Strike made Derby history, Slezak claimed the colt's half-sister My Blonde Mary (Oxbow) for $5,000.

“I am not a quiet race watcher,” Slezak admitted as he relived his Derby day experience. “My kids will be like, 'He's screaming again.' I'll also scream in a race for a $4,000 claimer but in this case, I lost my damn mind. I was like a crazy person. I felt like I had won the Derby.”

The purchase of My Blonde Mary for client Mary Jane Nuckols was a Michael Slezak special. The agent focuses on finding value with fillies and mares competing in the claiming ranks by meticulously studying every claimer entered to race while giving scrupulous attention to pedigree activity and family members that could have a breakout race performance or auction result. An array–or maybe a disarray–of notes cover the surface of his desk and on his computer, comprehensive spreadsheets would make little sense to anyone but Slezak himself.

“I look at every claiming race for fillies and mares in North America every day,” Slezak said. “It's a lot of work, but I liken it to Roger Federer or Serena Williams. They go out on the court and hit thousands of forehands every day so it's like second nature. For me, looking at claiming races every day almost becomes muscle memory. Sometimes you get a sensation that things seem to be coalescing with a family. It's like puzzle pieces that come together.”

Slezak first spotted My Blonde Mary well before Rich Strike came into the picture or had even made his first start. In her 4-year-old debut last February, she had one win from 10 starts, but Slezak noted that she was out of a Canadian champion and a half to a Grade II winner. The pedigree was enough for him to keep an eye on her, but he was still waiting for some recent activity in the family. When Rich Strike ran third in the GIII Jeff Ruby S., it was enough for Slezak to go after her as she competed in the claiming ranks at Tampa Bay this spring.

“It would be a bald-faced lie to tell you that I thought Rich Strike could win the Derby when we purchased the mare, but it's always cool to have a sibling on the Derby trail,” Slezak said. “She was a terrific mare that we weren't spending an arm and a leg on, plus you have the extra cachet to say you own the half-sister to that horse when you're at your Derby party.”

Slezak had an additional rooting interest on Derby Day. Last June, he purchased Time Sensitive (Nyquist), the half-sister to Derby contender Tawny Port (Pioneerof the Nile), after seeing Tawny Port's six-figure purchase price and noting that the colt was going to Brad Cox. When Tawny Port was two-for-two early this year, Slezak decided to run Time Sensitive through the Keeneland January Sale.

“She only brought $15,000, so my timing on that one was not stellar,” he admitted. “Fortunately it was for me and not a client, so I had nobody to yell at me except for myself.”

Even still, to pick out two half-sisters to Derby starters from bottom-level claiming races, Slezak was thrilled.

“I hope to repeat that every year,” he said with a laugh. “Of course it's not going to be that easy, but you can dream and you can do the research. With a lot of my clients, they're looking for commercial success to make money, but if you have that additional boost of having a connection to someone running in the Derby, the Oaks or the Breeders' Cup, that's icing on the cake.”

Growing up in upstate New York, Slezak's earliest memories are of his parents taking him to the races at Saratoga. He learned to read by studying the racing form and was always fascinated by pedigrees. He worked as an entertainment journalist for several decades, but racing always called to him. Seven years ago, he decided to make a career change and enter the Thoroughbred business.

When Slezak was first getting started, only a quarter of his purchases were for clients and he invested in the remainder himself. As he gained experience and celebrated early success, he began taking on more clients to where these days, the majority of his purchases are for other people.

Slezak said most of his principals have stayed the same from when he first started his business until now, but he added that his research system has become even more comprehensive.

“I think I've gotten better at understanding what the market wants,” he explained. “I'll find a hard-knocking, multiple stakes-placed mare, but if she's by a super obscure stallion, that's a harder sell. I'm also branching out a little more into buying in-foal mares at auction and selling their weanlings or yearlings. I'm trying to diversify and find other areas where I can identify horses selling for less than what they're worth.”

Slezak has already amassed an impressive list of success stories.

In 2018, he purchased You Laughin (Sharp Humor) for $2,000 when she was the last mare through the ring in one of the final sessions of the Keeneland November Sale. He sold her for a profit a few weeks later after her colt Zenden (Fed Biz) won a stake at Gulfstream Park.

Last January, he purchased the mare I Dazzle (Hold That Tiger) in foal to Catalina Cruiser for $13,000. In November, he sold the resulting filly for $100,000.

Of course, not every purchase is a home run. While Slezak isn't afraid to go with his gut when purchasing a prospect, he must also be willing to sell them when a family update doesn't happen after a period of time. Several years ago, he claimed the filly Tizn'tshebeautiful (Uncle Mo) in her debut and later sold her as a broodmare prospect for $45,000 at the 2017 Keeneland January Sale. Two months later, her half-brother Tiz the Law (Constitution) was foaled.

“Had I held onto her until Tiz the Law was a Classic winner, we could have done better,” he lamented. “I can't keep them all. But now, Tiz the Law won the Belmont and My Blonde Mary's brother won the Kentucky Derby, so I just need a Preakness winner to complete my own Triple Crown.”

Slezak stressed that his program is built on more than just studying the horses he might claim. Another big piece of the puzzle is following stakes horses, impressive maiden winners, and auction results to find updates on the racemares he already has tabs on. As was the case with My Blonde Mary, one important result from a sibling could tip the balance to make a mare worth pursing. He also noted that his network of connections at the track are essential in getting eyes on a mare before he claims her.

“There's so much potential to find value and it's really fun,” he said. “There's something crazy about these hard-knocking mares running for a bottom maiden claiming tag when somewhere at a bigger racetrack in a different time zone, there's a horse percolating toward the Kentucky Derby.”

Slezak hopes to continue to grow his business while keeping the same conservative approach with the mares he purchases. He said he enjoys the flexibility this career provides. Currently working on his third TV pilot script, he can also make time to attend his sons' soccer games and help them study for math tests.

“It has been a fun career change, even though my previous career was watching TV for a living which was also pretty fun,” he said. “It's never dull and everything about it is completely fascinating to me. It's been something I've been interested in and reading about for my entire life and I feel like there's so much more to learn. There's constantly new information and things to get better at.”

Slezak knows it will be difficult to replicate his results from this year's Kentucky Derby, but he is eager to give it a try.

“It was a great weekend, but now that those horses are claimed and the race is done, the question is, who is the next horse we're going to claim? How do I try and duplicate that? I couldn't wait to check out last week's claiming races to see what all was out there.”

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The Week in Review: Just What is Jason Servis Thinking

A Jan. 23 trial date for the Jason Servis case was announced last week, which means in about eight months there will be some closure and Servis will learn his fate. The way he has handled things, it seems that he is at least somewhat optimistic that he will be found not guilty. If so, he is deluding himself. Everything about this case says that he has virtually no chance of being acquitted.

Which raises a question: why is he fighting this when it makes far more sense to go to the government and cut a deal that will result in less prison time?

Has Servis not been paying attention? So far, the government is undefeated, unscored upon and running up the score. They have gotten a number of people to plead guilty, including Jorge Navarro, who is rotting away in prison. Seth Fishman and Lisa Giannelli fought and took their cases to court and in both cases the jury didn't have time to order lunch before convicting them. Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil, who is one tough cookie, has never shown so much as an ounce of sympathy for the dopers, alleged and otherwise.

Not that any of this should come as a surprise. Going to federal court and winning a criminal case brought by the federal government is nearly impossible. According to a survey by the Pew Research Center, 90% of those indicted in federal cases in 2018 pled guilty. Eight percent of all cases were dismissed and 2% went to trial. The end result is that in 2018, only 320 of 79,704 total federal defendants went to trial and won their cases, at least in the form of an acquittal.

The government's m.o. is to build cases against defendants that are so solid that a conviction is all but assured. That's the case with Servis. They say they have numerous wiretapped phone conversations in which he talks about drugging his horses. In one, he was allegedly caught saying that he gave the drug SGF-1000 to virtually all of the horses under his care. In court, when pleading guilty, veterinarian Kristian Rhein implicated Servis, testifying that he sold him illegal, performance-enhancing drugs. The prosecution has done an excellent job.

What, then, could possibly be Servis's defense? I can't even begin to think of one. I'm not a lawyer, but isn't this the very definition of being caught red-handed?

Then there's the matter of legal fees. Servis has hired a big-time lawyer in Rita Galvin, who represented former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in his battle over sexual harassment charges. The meter has been running for a long time and there's no doubt that Lawyer Galvin gets a hefty fee for her services.

The longest sentence handed out so far has been the five years given to Navarro. But for Servis, it could be far worse. In a superceding indictment issued in November, 2020, the charges of mail and wire fraud conspiracy were added to the original charges of drug adulteration and misbranding. The maximum sentence for drug adulteration and misbranding is five years. The maximum sentence for wire and mail fraud is 20 years. Now facing a possible sentence of 25 years, the 65-year-old Servis may well spend the rest of his life in prison.

If he takes the case to trial, the government has no incentive to go easy on him. If he loses, he is going to go to prison for a long time. The 25 years, or something close to it, is a possibility. That's why he needs to cut a deal. Why not ask that the mail and wire fraud charges be dropped and agree to plead guilty to the drug adulteration and misbranding charges?

Yes, Servis is innocent until proven guilty. Yes, he is entitled to his day in court. But he's heading down a path that is no doubt going to dead-end in his being convicted. Does he not realize this? Did he, after so many years of allegedly doping horses and not getting caught, come to think he is a bulletproof? This is not going to end well for him.

Short Fields in Stakes Races

Six graded stakes races were conducted Saturday and four of them had five-horse fields. The other two were the GIII Peter Pan S., which featured eight runners, and the GIII Beaugay S., which had a field of seven. The average field size for the six races was 5.83.

The most glaring example was the GI Man o'War S. It had all the elements that normally attract decent sized fields. It's a Grade I, the purse is $700,000 and it's a grass race. Still, after a scratch, only five runners went to the post.

This is an on-going problem and it's getting worse all of the time. You're even seeing a race like the GI Apple Blossom H., worth $1 million, attract only five horses.

The foal crop keeps falling and the top horses have never raced more infrequently. But there's been no adjustment when it comes to stakes racing. We're left with a situation where there are too many stakes races and not enough horses to fill them. It might be a tough ask to ask tracks to eliminate a meaningful number of their stakes races, but that's exactly what needs to happen.

Alabama-Bred Siblings Duke It Out

You probably haven't been paying much attention to the Alabama breeding program, which has been hanging on by a thread since the Birmingham Turf Club closed years ago. But there still is such a thing as an Alabama-bred and with no racing in the state they occasionally show in special races carded just for them in Louisiana. That was the case Saturday night at Evangeline Downs, which produced a racing oddity. Three of the five starters in the $25,000 race were full-siblings. Two Mikes N Doc G, Liken It and Kellys the Boss are all by Doc N Bubba G out of the mare Ausbrook and were bred by Kent and Lisa Gremmels. They finished behind Foolish Steve (Mosquiot). Among the brothers and sisters, Two Mikes N Doc G fared best, finishing third.

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Game On In Paris

Given how powerful Ballydoyle has become since the late 1990s, it is perhaps surprising that Aidan O'Brien has pulled off the English-French-Irish 2000 Guineas treble only once with the duo Rock of Gibraltar (Ire) and Landseer (GB) sharing the spoils between them in 2002. No other stable has made inroads into this unique annexation of the three major colts' mile Classics, but 20 years later Charlie Appleby stands on the brink after Coroebus (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) provided him with a breakthrough first Newmarket Classic at the end of last month. If Modern Games (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) prevails in ParisLongchamp's G1 Emirates Poule d'Essai des Poulains on Sunday, the achievement is well and truly in reach for Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) to complete in Saturday's G1 Irish 2000 Guineas. Interestingly, in 2002 O'Brien also had the one-two in the 2000 Guineas so there is direct recent historical precedent.

Coming to the fore with wins in Newmarket's G3 Tattersalls S. and the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf at Del Mar, with the latter contest marred by his bizarre scratching and reintroduction to the field, Modern Games has vital experience of travelling overseas and the hustle-and-bustle of a top international prize. “Modern Games has done well from two to three and I can't fault his preparation,” his trainer said of the likely favourite who occupies the box of one of Dubawi's best in Ghaiyyath (Ire). “We are very happy with his draw in stall four and there should be no excuses.”

 

In Pole Position

Monaco's Formula 1 driver Charles Leclerc needs no introduction and the Ferrari pilot has a small stake in Riviera Equine SARL and Haras d'Etreham's 'TDN Rising Star' Lassaut (Fr) (Almanzor {Fr}). He beat the re-opposing Tribalist (GB) (Farhh {GB}) over this trip at Chantilly Mar. 9 and in the course-and-distance Prix Machado Apr. 21 and appeals as the ideal type of Jean-Claude Rouget improver which tends to enter the mix in this Classic. Rouget also has Al Shaqab Racing's Apr. 17 G3 Prix de Fontainebleau winner Welwal (GB) (Shalaa {Ire}), who beat several of these in that course-and-distance trial which has been boosted by the subsequent G3 Prix de Guiche success of the stable's fifth-placed Vadeni (Fr) (Churchill {Ire}).

 

Not Forgetting Fabre

André Fabre has trained a modern-day record eight winners of the Poulains and while his sixth in the Fontainebleau represented a dip in form, Ancient Rome (War Front) was one of the country's leading juveniles for Coolmore and Westerberg. Having beaten Scherzo (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) in the G3 Prix des Chenes here in September, the relative of Pour Moi (Ire) was third over an inadequate seven in the G1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere here and second in the G1 Criterium International when the testing ground at Saint-Cloud had turned on him. The same ownership have a second string to their bow in Ballydoyle's The Acropolis (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}), who upped his game on his 3-year-old bow with a second in the seven-furlong Listed Ballylinch Stud 2000 Guineas Trial at Leopardstown Apr. 2. “Maybe he has just come to himself now, so he is worth chancing in this higher grade with the step up to a mile expected to suit,” The Acropolis's jockey Ryan Moore mused.

 

Osmose A Live Longshot

With 'TDN Rising Star' Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}) to aim at in the G1 Emirates Poule d'Essai des Pouliches, the task is to deny the home-trained contingent which has proven difficult of late. Since 2002, only one overseas raider has pulled it off in this Classic which tends to spring up a surprise more often that not. SPs of 38-1, 12-1, 33-1 and 14-1 have been returned in four of the last eight runnings, with only two favourites prevailing in that time. Two of the outsiders hailed from the Rouget stable and he supplies a pair of them here in 'TDN Rising Star' Osmose (Fr) (Zoffany {Ire}) and Zelda (Fr) (Zelzal {Fr}). Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Thani's Osmose looked in need of this mile when fourth in the G3 Prix Imprudence at Deauville Apr. 7 and the owner-breeder's racing manager Bertrand Le Métayer is in positive mood. “Osmose is giving very good vibes in her work,” he said. “She is very calm, placid and has a really good mind-set. We can't wait to see her run on good ground and, above all, in a race with pace!”

 

Pacaut And Doyle Take Aim

Zelda, who took the seven-furlong Listed Prix Saraca at Chantilly in October, carries the silks of the famed basketball player Tony Parker's Infinity Nine Horses. She will be ridden by Coralie Pacaut, the recipient of the 'Cravache d'Or' in 2019, who joins Hollie Doyle in a line-up which demonstrates the growing influence of female jockeys. Doyle is on the Harry and Roger Charlton-trained Jumbly (GB) (Gleneagles {Ire}), who carried the Rothschild colours to success in the Listed Radley S. at Newbury in October and who was second in the G3 Fred Darling S. on her return at Newbury Apr. 16. Roger Charlton is looking forward to the step up to a mile for the homebred. “She made good headway at Newbury and I guess she is bred to appreciate an extra furlong, so I hope she settles and I think, although she won on very soft ground at Newbury last season, she is a good-moving filly and on the expected quick ground she should be okay,” he said.

 

Blink And You'll Miss It

At Naas, sprinting is the name of the game on the track's Royal Ascot Trials Day, with the six-furlong G3 Coolmore Stud EBF Fillies Sprint S. attracting seven juvenile fillies headed by Ballydoyle's Apr. 10 Curragh maiden scorer Meditate (Ire) (No Nay Never). The Kieran Cotter-trained Matilda Picotte (Ire) (Sioux Nation) takes her on along with Jim Bolger's Comhra (Ire) (Vocalised), who she beat at the Curragh May 2 before Comhra went one better at Roscommon on Monday. In the G3 Goffs Lacken S., Commonwealth Cup prospects square up with the Beauty Stable Partnership's G3 Anglesey S. winner Beauty Inspire (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) tackling the Apr. 23 Listed Committed S. one-two New York City (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and Straight Answer (GB) (Kodiac {GB}).

 

Jet's Back

Also in the Lacken is Michael and Julia Iavarone and Michael O'Callaghan's G3 Cornwallis S. winner Twilight Jet (Ire) (Twilight Son {GB}), who was last seen finishing 10th in the GII Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint. “He always had a bit of size and a good mind. He's matured a lot over the winter, both mentally and physically, and he's a fine belter of a horse now,” O'Callaghan said. “His mind is very good and I expect it will be a long year for him, with Royal Ascot his first major target.”

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Sunday Racing Insights: Godolphin Unveils Secret Spice Half At Woodbine

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

4th-WO, $123K, Msw, 3yo, f, 7f (AWT), 2:49 p.m. ET

Godolphin and trainer Michael Stidham unveil 3-year-old filly AIOLI, a daughter of Darley's Medaglia d'Oro. She is out of a half-sister to Loving Vindication (Vindication), who has produced Canadian Horse of the Year Wonder Gadot (Medaglia d'Oro) and GISW Hard Not to Love (Hard Spun). Aioli is a half-sister to GISW Secret Spice (Discreet Cat), who sold at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Fall Mixed Sale for $1.4 million to Japan's Katsumi Yoshida. Aioli most recently worked four furlongs in :48 2/5 (4/9) May 8 over the all-weather at Fair Hill. Leading Woodbine jockey Kazushi Kimura gets the ride. TJCIS PPs

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