Ellis Park Tractor Driver Passes Away

Dorris “Heavy” Watson, the driver of the tractor that hit the inner rail Friday at Ellis Park, necessitating the moving of two turf races on the card to the dirt, has died. He had experienced a medical emergency during track maintainance and was taken to the hospital.

Watson began his Ellis Park career in 1997 and was well known at the track. Service arrangements are pending.

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Taking Stock: Caravel’s Merryman Legacy

The game is getting smaller and the bigger players are getting larger. That's how it seems, anyway, whether you're talking about owners, breeders, trainers or stallions.

For example, Saturday's sire of the moment was Juddmonte's European-based Frankel (GB). His G1 Epsom Derby-winning son Adayar (Ire) impressively won the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S. at Ascot for owner/breeder Godolphin, becoming the first 3-year-old since Frankel's sire Galileo (Ire) 20 years ago to land the prestigious double.

One of the best stallions in the world, Frankel stands for £175,000 and is patronized by high-end breeders like Godolphin, which also races Frankel's G1 Irish Derby winner Hurricane Lane (Ire). Two weeks ago, Hurricane Lane won the G1 Grand Prix de Paris at Longchamp, giving his sire the two best European 3-year-old colts of the season and Godolphin an embarrassment of riches. Godolphin is also enjoying a banner season in North America with such as Maxfield (Street Sense), Essential Quality (Tapit) and Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper) among many others.

It's much the same story if you substitute the “Godolphin” name with Coolmore, Juddmonte, WinStar, or several other prominent ownership groups, just as you can count on two hands the high-profile super trainers that condition most of the top horses or the elite group of stallions that have cornered the market on the best mares in the world to get the drift that racing is indeed becoming exclusively a sport for the “kings” of the game.

That's why it's always refreshing to see success for smaller players on a big stage. These days, it's rare, but it happens.

Juddmonte's Kentucky-based Mizzen Mast, a still-active 23-year-old who stands for a fraction of Frankel's fee and is far removed from the height of fashion, also was represented by a graded winner on Saturday when the 4-year-old Pennsylvania-bred filly Caravel won the Glll Caress S. on turf at Saratoga. The Caress obviously isn't as glamorous a race as the one Adayar won, but it was a triumph for a segment of the game that's quickly disappearing. The filly was bred and is co-owned by her trainer Elizabeth Merryman, who comes from a Maryland racing family that's been breeding and training homebreds for decades.

Mizzen Mast, who stands for $7,500, began his racing career in Europe, where he was a notch below the best of his generation. He was second in the Grand Prix de Paris, the race Hurricane Lane won, but he didn't find success at the highest level until he was transferred to California and won the Gl Malibu S. at Santa Anita on the dirt. Ironically, as a stallion he gets his best runners on turf, and seven of his eight Grade I/Group 1 winners (excluding one in Peru) have performed at that level on grass. In that sense, Caravel is running true to form, and she's reportedly being aimed for the Gl Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint. If that sounds ambitious, keep in mind that several fillies have won the race, including two-time winner Mizdirection, who also was sired by Mizzen Mast.

From what I've read, Merryman got Caravel's dam Zeezee Zoomzoom (Congrats) for free after she was done racing. The mare's lone win had come in a one-mile maiden special on the turf at Saratoga, and Merryman sent her, sight unseen, to be covered by grass specialist Mizzen Mast, a friend of small owner/breeders because he gets runners at an affordable fee. Caravel was foaled at her breeder's farm in Pennsylvania.

Merryman acquired her skills naturally and from an early age. Her parents were the late John B. and Katharine “Kitty” Merryman, longtime Maryland owner/breeders who owned the 500-plus acre The Orebanks, a farm near Sparks, MD, where they raised six kids, along with horses and cattle. Her father once headed the Maryland Horse Breeders' Association, and her parents bred and raced the decorated Maryland-bred filly Twixt (Restless Native) in the 1970s with relative Mrs. John Franklin, in whose colors she ran.

Twixt was bred by the Merrymans from an inexpensive mare and was sired by an Alfred Vanderbilt-bred and -owned son of Native Dancer who'd made only three starts (no stakes) and was standing at his owner's Sagamore Farm for $1,000.

I was a kid following racing during this period and was fortunate to see the popular Twixt race several times. All told, she won 26 races from 70 starts, including the Gl Top Flight H., and earned $619,141. She was trained by Katy Voss (who owns Chanceland), Elizabeth Merryman's oldest sister. Of the Merrymans' six kids, five became trainers at one time or another, mostly starting out with their parents' stock.

Back then, this wasn't as rare as it now seems. There were plenty of folks like the Merrymans in the Mid-Atlantic region with similar backgrounds–educated, somewhat preppy, frequently WASPy–whose lives revolved around horses and livestock, whether it was showing ponies, riding hunts, timber racing or racing on the flat. It's a world in which horsemanship was crafted from the bottom up, and horses were developed with patience, because racing them, instead of selling them as yearlings, was the priority. It's why Katy Voss could seamlessly take Twixt to the biggest of stages and compete against the best trainers of the era, just as Elizabeth Merryman has now done with Caravel at Saratoga.

Like Twixt, who was unraced at two and brought along patiently, so too was Caravel. Merryman, who trained Caravel at Fair Hill, started her five times last year at three, winning four sprint races with the filly, all in the Mid-Atlantic region at Penn National and Presque Isle in races on turf or all-weather. Caravel made one start at Pimlico, in the Listed Hill Top S., in which she was third in her lone start at a mile and a sixteenth on turf, but the filly won two black-type races on the all-weather at Presque Isle.

Once Merryman had established that sprinting on turf or all-weather was Caravel's metier, the trainer has honed that aspect of the filly's game and gradually upped the level of competition, culminating in her first graded win on Saturday–her fourth start of 2021. To date, Caravel has won seven of nine starts and earned $367,872, with her best days seemingly still to come.

This is a pattern of development that's rarely seen nowadays because the focus of many, it seems, is on the now instead of the future. You see it all the time with trainers quick to jump young well-bred maiden winners into graded black-type races to enhance value as quickly as possible, sometimes to the detriment of development.

As it turns out, Merryman has been rewarded for her patient approach with Caravel, because chef and high-end collector Bobby Flay purchased a reported 75% of the filly prior to the Caress, and she ran in his silks. Caravel, with Merryman's blessing, has now been moved to Graham Motion's barn to prepare for a possible tilt at the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint.

Wanamaker's

Elizabeth Merryman's daughter Liza Hendriks is a graduate of the Godolphin Flying Start program and is co-founder of the monthly online auction site Wanamaker's, which debuted last year. I have no idea what Flay paid for his interest in Caravel, but the filly was available for purchase on Wanamaker's last October before her run in the Hilltop S. She didn't find a buyer and was unsold for a $330,000 RNA–a bargain in retrospect.

As a family, the Merrymans have been strong supporters of Wanamaker's, with Chanceland, Katy Voss's farm, and Ann Merryman (another trainer and sister to Katy Voss and Elizabeth Merryman who races as The Orebanks) also consignors on the site. I've been a longtime fan of Ann Merryman's Twitter page (the handle, @Orebanks, is a paean to the farm where it all began for her parents), but that aside, it's notable that she sold her homebred gelding Fiya (Friesan Fire) to Robert Masiello last July on Wanamaker's for $400,000. Fiya has since won four of five starts for Masiello, including the Maryland Million Turf Sprint H. and the Claiming Crown Canterbury S., and most recently Fiya won an allowance/optional claimer at Belmont on July 4.

 

Sid Fernando is president and CEO of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, Inc., originator of the Werk Nick Rating and eNicks.

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Bell’s the One to Beat

Lothenbach Stables Inc.'s Bell's the One (Majesticperfection) takes on six rivals in Wednesday's GII Honorable Miss H. at Saratoga. The Neil Pessin pupil annexed last September's GI Derby City Distaff by a nose before finishing third behind Gamine (Into Mischief) in the GI Breeders' Cup F/M Sprint in November. Second in Keeneland's GI Madison S. Apr. 3, she was fourth in defense of her Derby City title May 1–again behind the nearly unbeatable Gamine and two other next-out graded scorers. The 5-year-old was last seen taking a tougher-than-average renewal of Churchill's Roxelana S. June 19, and prepped for this with a sharp :47 flat bullet breeze over the Arlington all-weather last Tuesday.

“I'm really not scared of any sprint filly in the country right now, to be honest,” Pessin said. “It's just a question of if she runs her race. If she does, she's going to be tough to beat no matter who shows up. I respect them all, but I don't fear any of them. I'm very confident in my filly's abilities.”

While Bell's the One is a perfect four-for-four and a graded winner at this six-furlong trip, she's likely slightly better going longer and as a late runner is somewhat vulnerable to pace dynamics. Among those who figure to show speed are rail-drawn 'TDN Rising Star' Ain't No Elmers (Goldencents), who found her best foam in a Churchill optional claimer June 17; and Honey I'm Good (Shackleford), a neck winner on Monmouth's Regret S. July 3 over a sloppy track.

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Third Time’s a Charm? Ward Looking Forward to Nunthorpe

Coming off a dominating performance in the GIII Quick Call S. at Saratoga, 2020 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint champion Golden Pal is pointing towards the G1 Nunthorpe S. on Aug. 20. Trainer Wesley Ward oversaw the 3-year-old son of Uncle Mo's training at Keeneland early this week as the colt prepares for a second trip overseas after a close second last year at Ascot in the G2 Norfolk S.

“I think he's really going to move forward fitness-wise from [the Quick Call] to the race in York,” Ward said on Monday morning. “We're going to take him up to Arlington Park and breeze him this Saturday. He'll stay there for a week and breeze the following Saturday there and then we'll have one last breeze before he gets on the plane to go to England.”

Ward will be looking to reconcile his first two journeys to York for the five-furlong Nunthorpe after two just-missed victories in recent years. First Mecca's Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) chased down Ward's juvenile filly Acapulco (Scat Daddy) in the final strides of the 2015 edition of the race and two years later, Ward stable star Lady Aurelia (Scat Daddy) suffered a photo-finish defeat to Sir Mark Prescott trainee Marsha (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}).

“Hopefully the third time is the charm,” Ward said with a chuckle.

The conditioner has all the faith in the world in his fleet-footed sprinter. His belief in Golden Pal's ability has been strong since he first laid eyes on the colt at the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

“Ben McElroy short lists for me at the Keeneland sales and he picked out this colt and a few others,” Ward recalled. “When we want to the barn and I took a look at this guy, I just fell in love with him. I told McElroy that this was my pick of the sale.”

But then Golden Pal, the son of 11-time stakes winner and 2015 GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint runner-up Lady Shipman (Midshipman), failed to hit his reserve when the hammered dropped for $325,0000.

Luckily, breeder Randy Lowe had noticed Ward hovering around the Taylor Made consignment before the colt had gone through the ring.

“He knew how fond I was of him and so fortunately, he gave him to me to train,” Ward said.

Golden Pal gets the three-length score in the GIII Quick Call S. | Sarah Andrew

Golden Pal quickly exceeded Ward's high expectations in his early training.

“You could tell in just the first months of galloping that he was an extreme athlete,” Ward said. “He was just very quick and agile on his feet and a very intelligent horse as well. Everything we taught him, he took to within the first few days. He came around a lot faster than the other colts. When we breezed him the first time, everything that I thought he would do, he did. It was just a question of keeping him sound and keeping him on a direct path to the races.”

Ward's plan hit a snag when Golden Pal shipped from Miami to Keeneland early last year in preparation to make his debut at Keeneland's annual spring meet, only to find out soon after that the races were cancelled due to COVID.

“Here I had a horse that was starting to climatize to the cooler temperatures and we had to double back around and bring him back to Miami, which isn't something I like to do,” Ward explained.

Despite the setback, Golden Pal made his debut on schedule in April at Gulfstream, going four and a half furlongs on the dirt.

“When Tyler Gaffalione came into the paddock, I was just so excited for this horse and I told him, 'Man, I think this is going to end up being one of the best horses I ever train,'” Ward said. “I think he's heard that story a time or two from a few other trainers too.”

But after Golden Pal sprinted to the early lead and ticked off a :21.58 opening quarter, he had to settle for a game second.

“He ran a great race but that first quarter mile got us,” Ward recalled. “But by seeing the race visually, I was very proud of him and I knew what I had. So we went forward with our plan to go to Ascot.”

Again in the G2 Norfolk S. at Ascot, early speed got the best of the Florida-bred juvenile as he finished second to The Lir Jet (Ire) (Prince of Lir {Ire}).

“He just moved a little too quickly and the horse was a little unseasoned,” Ward said. “Otherwise, I think he'd be undefeated today.”

All the pieces came together, however, in the later half of the bay colt's juvenile season as he finally made it to the winner's circle off a 3 ½-length score in the Skidmore S. at Saratoga before claiming the Juvenile Turf Sprint as the 4-5 favorite.

While the plan was set soon afterwards for the champion to target the G1 King's Stand S. at Royal Ascot, an ankle chip forced him to postpone the start of his 2021 campaign for surgery.

Less than a month before his eventual return in the Quick Call, Golden Pal was acquired from his breeder by Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith and Westerberg.

 

Stonestreet's Campanelle takes the G1 Darley Prix Morny at Deauville last year. | Scoop Dyga

After Golden Pal's impressive score at the Spa, Ward said he believes the probable future Coolmore stallion is in prime condition to show off a new level of talent as he continues through his sophomore campaign.

“To look at him, he's not a big, heavy colt,” he said. “He's everything you would want to see in a sprinter. He keeps himself kind of lean, but he's a very good eater. That's just his normal physique. He did the race at Saratoga essentially off of three works and he won convincingly.”

Ward is no longer concerned about how the pace of the race plays out, knowing his trainee has matured mentally since those first two career starts.

“Early on, he was just a little unseasoned,” Ward explained. “Now I think he's come to prominence where the jockeys realize what kind of horse he is and he's very rateable. So I think now from a tactical standpoint, the jockeys will be able to position him anywhere they want in the race and hopefully this next one will be a big one, because if he gets that done he stamps himself as a sire as far as what he'll accomplish in having a Group 1 win.”

The end goal for the season, the GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, would of course only increase stud appeal, but also perhaps avenge Lady Shipman's narrow miss in the same race six years prior.

“If he does get through this race, which is what we hope and what we're on target for, we're aiming for the Breeders' Cup at Del Mar,” Ward said. “The track should be in perfect condition as Del Mar is that time of year and it would be really exciting.”

One of Ward's other top stable stars, dual Group I winner Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), is preparing for yet another European tour. The 2020 Prix Morny and 2021 Commonwealth Cup victress is pointing toward the G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest on Aug. 8.

“She just had a beautiful breeze at Arlington Park [on July 24],” Ward reported of the 3-year-old Stonestreet Stables colorbearer. “She's going to fly out of Chicago O'Hare airport and has a direct flight into Paris, and then she'll move on down to Deauville–essentially the same route that she traveled last year and won. It'll be a tougher assignment as we're taking on older horses, but we get a little bit of a weight break. Frankie Dettori is signed up to ride and he's not going to be able to have a steak the night before, but he's assured me that he's going to make the weight.”

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