Equibase Analysis: Monarch’s Glen Poised To Upset Elkhorn For Maker

Saturday's Grade 2, $200,000 Elkhorn Stakes is one of two marathon 1 1/2-mile graded stakes during the Keeneland spring meeting. This race is for males and the Bewitch Stakes next week is for females. Ten horses entered the Elkhorn this year and most have top credentials in similar races.

In terms of career earnings, the field is led by Channel Cat, winner of over $950,000 in his career in similar races. However, the now 6-year-old is returning from three months off and hasn't won since taking the Grade 2 Bowling Green Stakes in August of 2019. Similarly, Cross Border has earned in excess of three-quarters of a million dollars but hasn't won since last July when victorious in the Lubash Stakes. Next there's 2019 Elkhorn runner-up Red Knight, who also captured the similar Grade 3 Sycamore Stakes at Keeneland last fall, and is returning from a five month layoff.

Say the Word has run much more recently than Channel Cat and Red Knight as he was beaten less than one length when second in the Grade 3 San Luis Rey Stakes. Another horse worth noting is Tide of the Sea, who won the Grade 2 William L. McKnight Stakes in January before a runner-up effort in the Grade 2 Mac Diarmida Stakes in February. North Dakota proved capable against similar horses when capturing the Grade 3 Red Smith Stakes last November. A newcomer to marathon stakes on turf is Monarch's Glen, a recent acquisition by trainer Mike Maker, who saddled the winner of the Elkhorn in 2016, 2019, and last year.

Fantasioso makes his U.S. debut after importing from his native Argentina, where he won five of 23 races and was second in six others. Epic Bromance is trying stakes competition for the first time off a wire-to-wire win at 11 furlongs last month. Crafty Daddy rounds out the field, having returned from four months off at the end of March to finish third in the Kentucky Cup Classic Stakes. He has never run farther than a mile and one-eighth whereas most of the others are proven at this distance.

Trainer Mike Maker has become well-known the past few years for winning these kinds of long turf races, and his record at Keeneland particularly bears that out. A STATS Race Lens query looking at Maker's record on turf at Keeneland reveals he has saddled three of the last six winners of the Elkhorn Stakes, as well as one of the winners in the fall equivalent of this race, the Sycamore Stakes.

Maker has three entrants in this race in the form of Cross Border, Monarchs Glen (GB) and Tide of the Sea, and of the trio I fancy Monarchs Glen more than the other two, particularly as I suspect he will go to post at the highest odds of the three. Monarchs Glen won five of 11 races in the U.K. and Dubai before importing to the U.S. in the spring of 2019. He was so well regarded in Europe that in his final start, in the fall of 2018, he ran in the Group 1 ($1.7 million) Qipco Champion Stakes against Cracksman and Crystal Ocean. Since then he won just one of 12 U.S. starts before being entered into a $75,000 claiming race this January. Claimed out of a third place effort in that race, Monarchs Glen finished ninth and fourth before being claimed once more, this time by Mike Maker.

The fact that the horse was claimed for $62,500 out of his most recent start and can earn the winner's share of $120,000 may be incentive enough to think Maker capable of winning this race again, but recalling 2019 Sycamore winner Marzo was a recent claim before the victory by Maker, as well as many of Maker's other stakes winners were acquisitions where he saw something other trainers had missed, makes me believe Monarchs Glen can run well although he's never raced this far.

Being by champion Frankel out of a Lear Fan mare is the reason I believe this trip is what he wants. Additionally, the 110 Equibase Speed Figure he earned winning last November matching the figures of horses already proven at the level such as Say the Word (111) and Red Knight (114) so he may only need to repeat his best effort to post the upset win.

Say the Word won the Northern Dancer Stakes at this 12 furlong turf trip last November, certainly the biggest win of his career to that point. Three races later and after moving to the barn of trainer Phil D'Amato in California, Say the Word once again ran a big race, missing by three-quarters of a length to multiple grade stakes winner United in the San Luis Rey Stakes. With the meet's leading jockey in Luis Saez getting on and with a career-best 111 Equibase Figure from his most recent race to repeat or improve upon, Say the Word would be no surprise if he was right in the thick of the action on the wire.

Red Knight fits perfectly here with one small exception and that is he hasn't raced since November. On the other hand, Red Knight finished second of 10 last September in the Kentucky Turf Cup following more than seven months off. Following that effort, Red Knight won the Sycamore Stakes at this distance on the Keeneland turf, earning a very strong 114 figure which would make him competitive here if repeated. Jockey James Graham rode Red Knight in the Sycamore, not before or since, and gets back on so that is a positive sign as well.

Honorable mention goes to Tide of the Sea, another horse trained by Mike Maker. Likely to be the early pacesetter, Tide of the Sea used his early speed to win the William L. McKnight Stakes at Gulfstream Park in wire-to-wire fashion in January. However, not only did that effort yield at 104 figure about seven to 10 points lower than the main contenders above, Epic Bromance is another horse in this field who appears to be a need-the-lead type, so I think Tide of the Sea may not get the easy lead he needs to win. Nevertheless, he could be a part of the exacta and finish second at the very least, just as he's done in four of 11 lifetime races.

The rest of the field, with their best representative Equibase Speed Figures, is Channel Cat (111), Crafty Daddy (108), Cross Border (115), Epic Bromance (103), Fantasioso (ARG) (112) and North Dakota (98).

Win Contenders:
Monarch's Glen
Say the Word
Red Knight

Elkhorn Stakes – Grade 2
Race 9 at Keeneland
Saturday, April 17 – Post Time 5:30 PM E.T.
One Mile and One Half on Turf
Four Year Olds and Upward
Purse: $200,000

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Ft. Lauderdale: Maker Hoping Pair Earn Chance At Pegasus Turf, Channel Cat Returns From Layoff

Upset winner of the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) in January with Zulu Alpha, trainer Mike Maker will find out whether he has a candidate or two to defend his title next month when he sends out Somelikeithotbrown and Tide of the Sea in Saturday's $200,000 Fort Lauderdale (G2) at Gulfstream Park.

The Fort Lauderdale for 3-year-olds and up going 1 1/8 miles on the grass is the hometown prep for the 1 3 /16-mile Pegasus Turf, among seven graded-stakes worth $4.8 million in purses on Saturday, Jan. 23 led by the $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) for 4-year-olds and up on dirt.

Skychai Racing and Sand Dollar Stable's Somelikeithotbrown is a two-time graded-stakes winner of $689,338 in purse earnings that drew the rail in a field of 10 for the Fort Lauderdale that includes eight stakes winners, six of them graded.

In his most recent effort, Somelikeithotbrown led all the way to beat fellow New York-breds in the Oct. 24 Mohawk at Belmont Park after finishing second to Fort Lauderdale rival Factor This in the Dinner Party (G2) at Pimlico Race Course. Both races came at 1 1/16 miles.

Somelikeithotbrown beat another Fort Lauderdale combatant, Halladay, to win the Bernard Baruch (G2) July 26 at Saratoga; Halladay came back to win the Fourstardave (G1) in his next start. Somelikeithotbrown was third by less than a length in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf (G1) at 2 and won the John Battaglia and Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) to open his 3-year-old season before being sidelined after a fourth in the Blue Grass (G2).

“He's a very attractive horse. He always showed talent as a 2-year-old. He followed it up with a great Breeders' Cup run,” Maker said. “He got a minor injury in the Blue Grass and we had to stop on him but he came back this year and had a heck of a year.

“He continues to do well,” he added. “Hopefully, if he can run his race on Saturday, we can move on to the Pegasus.”

Tyler Gaffalione, who won last year's Pegasus Turf for Maker, has the call on the typically front-running Somelikeithotbrown.

“That's his running style, and we're going to live and die by it,” Maker said.

Three Diamonds Farm's Tide of the Sea will be making his stakes debut in his ninth overall start and fifth since joining Maker's string after being purchased for $80,000 at Keeneland's November 2019 breeding stock sale.

“He's a late-maturing horse,” Maker said. “They purchased him out of the sale and he's had a good year. I think he's going to be a force to be reckoned with in the marathon division this year.”

Tide of the Sea takes a two-race win streak into the Fort Lauderdale, going 1 5/16 miles Sept. 12 at Kentucky Downs and 1 ½ miles Oct. 7 at Keeneland. Joe Bravo rides from Post 7.

“I'd prefer to go a bit longer but we don't have that opportunity now so we figured we'd give him a shot going the mile and an eighth,” Maker said. “He's on top of his game right now so I think he deserves a chance. He's another one to get a good read on if we move on to the Pegasus or the McKnight.”

The $150,000 W.L. McKnight (G3) for 4-year-olds and up at 1 ½ miles on the turf is part of the Pegasus day undercard.

Michael Hui's Zulu Alpha upset the 2020 Pegasus Turf at odds of nearly 12-1, then went on to win the Mac Diarmida (G2) and run second by a neck to stablemate Bemma's Boy in the Pan American (G2) during the 2019-2020 Championship Meet. He was forced to miss the Nov. 7 Breeders' Cup Turf (G1) with slight swelling in his left front leg.

“He's doing fine. He's on the farm,” Maker said. “Hopefully here in the next two or three weeks we'll see if we get to bring him back in or not.”

Calumet Farm's homebred Grade 2 winner Channel Cat, closing in on $1 million in career earnings, will launch his comeback off a nine-month break between starts in Saturday's $200,000 Fort Lauderdale (G2).

The 5-year-old son of turf champion English Channel came within a length of winning last year's Fort Lauderdale, beaten a neck for second by Admission Office. After running a troubled 10th in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1), Channel Cat was fourth by 1 ½ lengths in the Pan American (G2) March 28, his most recent race.

Channel Cat will be making his first start for Calumet's private trainer, Jack Sisterson, after winning five of 22 races and $948,592 in purse earnings for Todd Pletcher. Channel Cat will go up against a pair of Pletcher trainees, Grade 1 winner Halladay and multiple stakes winner Largent, in the Fort Lauderdale.

“No real major issues, just a little let down. With Calumet in Lexington and me being stabled at Keeneland, we've got paddocks to turn them out and things. It wasn't anything else,” Sisterson said. “Todd did a great job with him and they just wanted to keep in that routine of turning him out in the paddocks and things like that. He's done well since we shipped him down here and we look forward to seeing him run on Saturday.”

Corey Lanerie has the assignment from Post 5 of 10 in the Fort Lauderdale. A three-time stakes winner including the 2018 Bald Eagle Derby at Laurel Park and 2019 Bowling Green (G2) at Saratoga, Channel Cat has breezed twice over the turf at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County.

“I've had him for a couple of months now and he's just a typical English Channel. He's very workmanlike on the dirt, but when you put him on the grass he puts his best footsteps forward,” Sisterson said. “We don't [typically] win off a layoff but we'll expect him to improve a lot off the Fort Lauderdale and fingers crossed we can regain some of the form he had when Todd did so well with him. It might be hard to regain some of that, but he's doing well at the moment.”

A return trip to the Pegasus Turf would be in store, Sisterson said, should Channel Cat run well. Instilled Regard, last year's Fort Lauderdale winner, finished third in the 2020 Pegasus Turf.

“Absolutely, that's the goal,” Sisterson said. “Sometimes they slow down with age so we'll see if that's the case with him. Training-wise he doesn't show that he has, but you don't know until you bring them over there in the afternoon. That's the main thing.”

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