United Repeats in Eddie Read At Del Mar

Under Del Mar's leading rider Flavien Prat, United bettered his last-out fourth place in the Grade 2 Charlie Whittingham with a repeat victory in the Grade 2 Eddie Read, following up his half-length win in the 2020 edition at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif.

United stalked the early pace fifth behind the front-running Award Winner, who set steady fractions of :25.19 for the first quarter and :49.43 for the half-mile. The Richard Mandella trainee waited for the final turn to make his move, Prat sending the Giant's Causeway gelding to the outside for running room. Both Smooth Like Strait and United challenged Award Winner coming out of the turn, Smooth Like Strait briefly taking the lead as United bore down on him, passing the Michael McCarthy trainee in the final strides to win by a neck. Count Again rallied late for third. Vintage Print, Award Winner, Restrainedvengence, and Say the Word rounded out the field. The final time for the 1 1/8 miles was 1:49.49.

United paid $8.60, $3.40, and $2.80. Smooth Like Strait paid $2.60 and $2.20. Count Again paid $2.80 to show.

Find this race's chart here.

After posting four wins in six races in 2020, United started 2021 with a victory in the Grade 3 San Luis Rey Stakes before finishing fourth in the G2 Charlie Whittingham, both at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif. With this win in the G2 Eddie Read, United has two wins in three starts, to bring his record to nine wins in 20 lifetime starts for career earnings of $1,675,549.

Owned by LNJ Foxwoods, United is a 6-year-old gelding by Giant's Causeway out of Indy Punch, by Pulling Punches. He was bred in Kentucky by Rosemont Farm and consigned by Four Star Sales at the 2016 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale and sold to Solis and Litt for $300,000.

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Homebred Smooth Like Strait Runs for More Than Mike Cannon

For obvious reasons, Mike Cannon has enjoyed the run that Smooth Like Strait (Midnight Lute) is on. It's not just that he's become a Grade I winner this year, has earned $933,823 in his career or that he is the morning line favorite in Saturday's

GII Eddie Read S. at Del Mar. That matters to Cannon, but maybe not as much as the fact that the horse's success has allowed him to pump a large sum of money into a charity he supports, The Special Operations Care Fund (SOC-F).

While it is not unusual for owners to donate a portion of a horse's winnings to a charity, Cannon has gone above and beyond. He donates 50% of the horse's earnings to the charity which provides support to soldiers who had served in special operations forces, including the Navy Seals. If Smooth Like Strait, who could be one of the favorites in this year's GI Breeders' Cup Mile, continues to thrive, it's possible that Cannon will donate more than $1 million this year to SOC-F.

“They are a small charity and I support them,” the Las Vegas-based businessman, who owns an outdoor lighting company, said. “The reason why? I think it is civilians' guilt.”

Cannon, who never served in the military, assumed that the country's elite soldiers would be treated like heroes once they return to civilian life. After befriending a member of the Navy Seal team that killed Osama Bin Laden, Cannon learned that isn't necessarily the case. Rather, he says, the government turns their back on these soldiers once they are out of the military.

“I just assumed these guys, including Seal Team 6 guys, were treated like rock stars while serving and I just assumed that when they got out, they were treated the same,” he said. “Then I found out that when you are out, the government doesn't do too much for them. The government doesn't give a damn about them.”

Those who have what it takes to serve in special forces units are generally among the toughest and bravest people out there. Yet, Cannon says that since they are constantly put into such high stress and dangerous situations they are not immune from suffering from mental problems.

“These guys have a ton of issues,” he said. “Brain problems, PTSD, drinking, drugs, marital issues. When they are in they get treated really well because the government puts so much money into their training. They are taken care of because the government sees them as assets. But, when they are out, the government stops caring about them and doesn't help them in any way. These guys have long lasting injuries, including traumatic brain injuries. From all the concussions of breaching the doors with explosives, they get traumatic brain injuries. They can't even sleep at night or think straight. They go to alcohol and drugs because that's the only thing that calms them down.”

Many of the afflicted soldiers are sent to the Brain Treatment Center in San Diego, which, Cannon said, is about 20 minutes from his summer home in Del Mar. The treatment includes an analysis of brain wave data that is used to target treatment parameters. Cannon said he has opened his home to more than 20 soldiers who have signed up for the treatment, which takes eight weeks. The program, Cannon says, can be highly effective.

“It's life-changing,” Cannon said. “I can say that because I live with these guys and they stay at my house. They show up and they can only sleep two hours a night. They are in really bad shape. Imagine only being able to sleep two, three hours a night. The government, all they do is put them on all these drugs. It's terrible what they do to them. By the time they leave, after eight weeks of this brain treatment, they can sleep like normal human beings, they don't have anxiety, they're off the meds. They're like real people again.”

While Cannon is to be commended for his charitable work, it wouldn't have been possible had his fortunes as an owner not changed dramatically because of Smooth Like Strait. Cannon normally has four or five broodmares and says that his initial years in racing were filled with frustrations and “not a lot of trips to the winner's circle.” Entering 2020, his Cannon Thoroughbreds Stable, had never made more than $172,000.

“Before Smooth Like Strait, I was on my way out,” he said. “I was about ready to sell everything.”

The colt started off strong as a 2-year-old, winning the GIII Cecil B. DeMille S., and has been getting better ever since. At three, he won the GIII La Jolla H., GII Twilight Derby and GII Mathis Brothers Mile S. After running second in this year's I Kilroe Mile S. and third in the GI Turf Classic at Churchill Downs, he broke through to win the GI Shoemaker Mile S. in his last start. He earned $180,000 in the Shoemaker, with $90,000 going to the Special Operations Care Fund.

“By the grace of God, he came along and brought me back in,” said Cannon. “He just tries and he's got a lot of heart. We've been on a lucky roll and have been able to do something really important. I just hope it continues.”

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Level Playing Field For Eddie Read

Saturday's GI Eddie Read S. at Del Mar brings together arguably the Southern California circuit's best middle-distance horse in the form of LNJ Foxwoods' United (Giant's Causeway) and Cannon Thoroughbreds' Smooth Like Strait (Midnight Lute), clearly best at a mile, but who has run with merit over the nine-furlong trip as well.

United, runner-up in the 2019 GI Breeders' Cup Turf over a mile and a half, made last year's Eddie Read the third of a three-race winning streak and he added a victory in the 10-furlong GI John Henry Turf Championship ahead of an eighth in the Breeders' Cup Turf. The chestnut returned to action with a pace-pressing defeat of the re-opposing Say the Word (More Than Ready) in the 12-panel GIII San Luis Rey S. Mar. 20, but was a head-scratching third at 30 cents on the dollar behind Award Winner (Ghostzapper) in the GII Charles Whittingham S. when dropped back down to a mile and a quarter May 29.

Smooth Like Strait missed by a head to Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}) in last year's GI Hollywood Derby over this course and distance, but atoned for that defeat in the GII Mathis Brothers Mile a month later. Run down in the shades of the post by Hit the Road (More Than Ready) in the GI Kilroe Mile in March, the bay was a neck behind the dead-heating Domestic Spending and Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) in the 1 1/8-mile GI Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic May 1 and exits a 1 1/2-length score over Say the Word–with Restrainedvengeance (Hold Me Back) third–in the GI Shoemaker Mile at Santa Anita May 31.

Count Again (Awesome Again), winner of this track's GII Seabiscuit H. in his first run for trainer Phil D'Amato last November, and outsider Vintage Print (Curlin) round out the field of seven.

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Smooth Like Strait, Going Global Headliners In Saturday’s Del Mar Stakes Doubleheader

Del Mar will present a stakes doubleheader Saturday with the 48th running of the Grade 2, $250,000 Eddie Read Stakes being one of the offerings and the 54th edition of the Grade 2, $200,000 San Clemente Stakes being the other.

The pair of black type, added-money affairs will highlight an 11-race card that has a first post of 2 p.m.

The Eddie Read, named for Del Mar's long-time publicity director, has drawn a field of seven solid older stakes aces, including Cannon Thoroughbred's Smooth Like Strait and LNJ Foxwoods' United. They'll run a mile and one-eighth on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course in Race 8 on the program.

Then the San Clemente, named for the Orange Country beach town just above the Marines' Camp Pendelton base north of the track, will go forth with a dozen 3-year-old fillies in the gate for a one-mile spin on the grass that is scheduled to be Race 10.

The Irish filly Going Global, a stakes winner of all four of her U.S. starts this year, appears a stout choice and surely the one to beat in the San Clemente, which serves as a key prep for the track's championship race for sophomore fillies – the Grade 1, $300,000 Del Mar Oaks at nine furlongs on Saturday, Aug. 21.

Here's the field for the Eddie Read with weights and riders: OXO Equine's Vintage Print (121, Adam Beschizza); United (121, Flavine Prat); Agave Racing Stable or Sam-Son Farm's Say the Word (123, Mike Smith); Agave Racing Stable or Sam-Son Farm's Count Again (121, Joe Bravo); Amerman Racing's Award Winner (123, Juan Hernandez); Smooth Like Strait (125, Umberto Rispoli), and Brinkerhoff or Grayson Jr.'s Restrainedvengence (121, Tyler Baze).

The San Clemente lineup looks like this: Perry and Ramona Bass' Pizzazz (120, Kyle Frey); Dubb, Gevertz or Nentwig, et al's Going Global (1232, Prat); Bernsen, Lambert or Hale's Founder's Day (118, Baze); Branham or Naify's Freedom Flyer (120, Victor Espinoza); Slam Dunk Racing or Platts' Tetragonal (120, Bravo); Strand Beach's Equilove (120, Ricky Gonzalez); Derrick Fisher's Jibber Jabber (118, Geovanni Franco); Roncelli Family Trust and Roney's Dramatizer (118, Edwin Maldonado); Kaleem Shah's Madone (123, Henandez); Schumer or Screnci's Karakatsie (118, Kent Desormeaux); SF Racing's Nimbostratus (120, Abel Cedillo), and Harris Farms' Closing Remarks (123, Rispoli).

Smooth Like Straight, trained by Mike McCarthy, comes into the Read off a front-running tally in the Grade 1 Shoemaker Mile at Santa Anita on May 31. The handy 4-year-old by sprint champion Midnight Lute is a seven-time winner who has banked $933,823 and could take a bunch of catching Saturday.

United has won eight races and more than $1.5 million over a 19-race career thus far. The 6-year-old gelding by Giant's Causeway won the Eddie Read last year.

In the San Clemente, Going Global, a daughter of the Irish stallion Mehmas, won only one of four starts in her native land as a 2-year-old, but has done nothing but win with her shift stateside. She is conditioned by Phil D'Amato.

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