Tasting The Stars Headlines Van Clief Stakes At Colonial Downs

Virginia-bred Tasting The Stars, an impressive 5-for-7 in her career, headlines Monday's $100,000 Van Clief Stakes for Virginia-restricted horses at Colonial Downs in New Kent, Va. The field of nine includes Todd Pletcher's Apurate, the second early choice.

The restricted stakes, open to those that are Virginia-bred, sired, or certified, is 1 1/16th miles on grass and is the eighth of nine races scheduled.

Newtown Anner Stud Farm's Tasting the Stars is fresh off turf stakes wins in the Nellie Mae Cox at Colonial July 19 and in the Brookmeade at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md., last October. The 5-year-old Bodemeister mare prevailed three times in 2019 — in the Just Jenda Stakes at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, N.J., and in allowance and maiden special weight races at Fair Grounds in New Orleans, La. The Van Clief headliner finished sixth in the 2019 Virginia Oaks as the betting favorite. She has bankrolled $204,600 and is 3-for-4 on turf. The 9-5 early choice is trained by John Kimmel and will be ridden by Feargal Lynch.

A1A Racing's Apurate is the second choice and was runner-up most recently in a Monmouth turf allowance. The 4-year-old Summer Front filly broke her maiden October 20 at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., and has earned $129,360 from 13 starts including a win and five runner-up finishes. David Cohen will ride the Kentucky-bred.

Larry Johnson and RDM Racing Stable's No Mo Lady is third early choice at 6-1. The 5-year-old Uncle Mo mare finished third in the Grade 3 Gallorette Stakes last October at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md., and previously, had back-to-back seconds in the All Along Stakes and Indiana General Assembly Distaff Stakes. The Michael Trombetta trainee will be ridden by Julian Pimentel.

Also in the field is Inside The Box, Unruly Julie, Fionnbharr, Sweet Sandy, Princess Theorem, and Dare to Promise.

First post at Colonial Monday is 1:45 PM. The Van Clief is scheduled at 5:01 PM. The summer racing season in New Kent will continue on a Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday basis through September 1. The $250,000 New Kent County Virginia Derby (Gr. 3) is Tuesday, August 31.

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Con Lima Sets Pace, Holds Off Higher Truth To Win Saratoga Oaks

After being inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame on Friday, Todd Pletcher visited another familiar spot Sunday, the winner's circle at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. His 3-year-old graded stakes winner Con Lima added another stakes win to her resume, taking the Grade 3 Saratoga Oaks Invitational by three-quarters of a length over Higher Truth.

Gam's Mission broke fastest, but Flavien Prat had Con Lima on the lead with a few strides of the gate, taking over before the first turn of the 1 3/16-mile Saratoga Oaks. Running easily on the front, Prat and Con Lima controlled the pace, setting fractions of :23.64 for the first quarter and :50.02 for the first half-mile. Behind her, Gam's Mission and Higher Truth stalked in second and third, poised to challenge Con Lima in the stretch.

Around the final turn, Gam's Mission made her move first but was not able to pass Con Lima, fading in the stretch. Higher Truth pursued the front runner in the last furlong, making up ground to get within a three-quarters of a length of Con Lima at the wire. Creative Flair, who was taken up early and had to go wide to find running room, was able to pass horses in the stretch to grab third. Plum Ali, Gam's Mission, Out of Sorts, Messidor, and Rocky Sky rounded out the field of eight.

The final time for the 1 3/16 miles was 1:54.42. Find this race's chart here.

Con Lima paid $8.10, $5.00, and $3.30. Higher Truth paid $6.80 and $4.00. Creative Flair paid $3.30 to show.

“I was analyzing the race beforehand and we were the only speed but I wasn't 100 percent sure with a couple of the Euros if they would show some initiative. I left it in Flavien's [Prat] hands and Plan A was to break well and see if anybody would try to take the lead away from us and if they didn't, we'd be happy to have it. It worked out really well,” Pletcher said after the Saratoga Oaks.

“The speed was pretty much me and the Godolphin filly [No. 7, Creative Flair] and it seems she broke a step slow. I broke better than her and I ended up on the lead,” jockey Flavien Prat told the NYRA Press Office after the race. “Going to the first turn I felt really comfortable. I was really pleased with the way she was traveling and I felt we were doing some easy fractions. She really kicked on well.”

Bred in Texas by Lisa Kuhlmann, Con Lima is a 3-year-old filly by Commissioner out of Second Street City, by Consolidator. Purchased for $22,000 from Niall Brennan Stables at the March 2020 Ocala Breeders Two-Year-Olds In Training Sale, she is owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Joseph Graffeo, Del Toro, Eric Nikolaus, and Troy Johnson. With her win in the G3 Saratoga Oaks Invitational, Con Lima has five wins in eight starts in 2021, for a lifetime record of seven wins and five seconds in 13 starts, with career earnings of $884,865.

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Con Lima Box to Wire in Saratoga Oaks

Sunday, Saratoga
SARATOGA OAKS INVITATIONAL S.-GIII, $700,000, Saratoga, 8-8, 3yo, f, 1 3/16mT, 1:54.42, fm.
1–CON LIMA, 121, f, 3, by Commissioner
1st Dam: Second Street City (SW, $209,843), by Consolidator
2nd Dam: Trix City, by Carson City
3rd Dam: Always Nettie, by Vice Regent
($15,000 Wlg '18 KEENOV; $19,000 RNA Ylg '19 KEESEP;
$22,000 RNA 2yo '20 OBSMAR). O-Eclipse Thoroughbred
Partners, Joseph F. Graffeo, Eric Nikolaus Del Toro & Troy
Johnson; B-Lisa Kuhlmann (TX); T-Todd A. Pletcher; J-Flavien
Prat. $375,000. Lifetime Record: 13-7-5-0, $884,865. Werk
Nick Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross
pedigree.
2–Higher Truth (Ire), 121, f, 3, Galileo (Ire)–Wannabe Better
(Ire), by Duke of Marmalade (Ire). (500,000gns Ylg '19
TATOCT). O-Michael J. Ryan, Jeff Drown, & Team Hanley;
B-Churchtown House Stud (IRE); T-Chad C. Brown.
$130,000.
3–Creative Flair (Ire), 121, f, 3, Dubawi (Ire)–Hidden Gold
(Ire), by Shamardal. O/B-Godolphin, LLC (IRE); T-Charles
Appleby. $70,000.
Margins: 3/4, 1 1/4, 1 1/4. Odds: 3.05, 7.40, 3.20.
Also Ran: Plum Ali, Gam's Mission, Out of Sorts, Messidor (Ire), Rocky Sky (Ire).

Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs, or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners' Con Lima was afforded an easy lead under Flavien Prat, opened up in the stretch and held sway late to annex the GIII Saratoga Oaks Sunday at the Spa.

Originally just a $15,000 Keeneland November weanling buy, the dark bay was privately purchased out of a sharp main-track graduation for trainer Carlos David last July at Gulfstream and was runner-up in the off-turf P.G. Johnson S. and Our Dear Peg S. Scoring a wire-to-wire 5 1/4-length success in her grass bow Dec. 12 at Gulfstream, she repeated in the Ginger Brew S. and was second in the GIII Sweetest Chant S. before being elevated into a GIII Herecomesthebride S. victory via disqualification. Taking one more crack on dirt in the GII Gulfstream Park Oaks, she faded to fourth after setting a slow pace, her only finish out of the exacta thus far, but bounced back when returned to the lawn with triumphs in the Honey Ryder S. and GIII Wonder Again S.

Just run down late when second in the GI Belmont Oaks Invitational S. last out, Con Lima was made a narrow favorite over Godolphin invader Creative Flair here and broke a bit outwardly. Easing her way to the front as no one else took the initiative, she clicked off comfortable fractions of :23.64, :50.02 and 1:14.34 with ears pricked. Turning aside a brief bid from Gam's Mission (Noble Mission {GB}) past the three-sixteenths pole, she skipped clear into the final furlong as Higher Truth came off the rail to take her shot. Jumping back to her left lead at the sixteenth marker, it briefly appeared that Con Lima was in danger, but Prat kept her to task to score by a fairly comfortable margin in the end.

“I was analyzing the race beforehand and we were the only speed but I wasn't 100% sure with a couple of the Euros if they would show some initiative,” said winning trainer Todd Pletcher, capping off a weekend that started with his Hall of Fame induction. “I left it in Flavien's hands and Plan A was to break well and see if anybody would try to take the lead away from us and if they didn't, we'd be happy to have it. It worked out really well. He just gradually got up there instead of having to hustle her and use her. She relaxed really well. You could see when she turned up the backside and her ears were flicking back and forth that she was in a happy zone.”

“The speed was pretty much me and the Godolphin filly and it seems she broke a step slow,” said Prat. “I broke better than her and I ended up on the lead. Going to the first turn I felt really comfortable. I was really pleased with the way she was traveling and I felt we were doing some easy fractions. She really kicked on well. I got her ready to kick and she really did. When she swapped leads, she responded well from that point.”

Pedigree Notes:

One of nine stakes winners and three graded stakes winners for 2014 GI Belmont S. runner-up Commissioner, Con Lima is the first foal to race out of her stakes-winning dam. She is followed by a yearling Point of Entry colt named Pico de Gallo and a weanling colt by Lord Nelson. Second Street City was bred to Game Winner this spring.

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It’s All About the Horses..And Their Trainers at HOF Induction Ceremony

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY–To punctuate his acceptance speech that concluded the Hall of Fame induction ceremony Friday, trainer Todd Pletcher used a favorite line of the late Cot Campbell, the Thoroughbred owner and colorful racing personality who was one of his longtime patrons.

“It's not going to sound nearly as cool coming from me, he was a cool guy,” Pletcher said, “but most of all, I want to thank the horses, the horses and the horses.”

Campbell's words were a fitting coda for racing's annual feel-good day that salutes the best of the best in the America's oldest sport. The 2020 ceremony was cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic so the 65th and 66th Hall of Fame classes at the National Museum of Racing were welcomed into the shrine during a two-hour ceremony at the Fasig-Tipton's Humphrey S. Finney Sales Pavilion.

Pletcher, 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah and steeplechase trainer Jack Fisher comprised this year's class. The 2020 inductees were trainer Mark Casse, jockey Darrell McHargue, the horses Wise Dan and Tom Bowling, and three honored as Pillars of the Turf: J. Keene Dangerfield Jr., George D. Widener, Jr. and Alice Headley Chandler. Pletcher and American Pharoah were elected in the first year they were eligible to be on the ballot: 25 years of service for a trainer and five calendar years after retirement for horses.

While Casse, with the help if his wife, Tina, delivered the most emotional speech of the event, Pletcher was typically precise and under control throughout. He was introduced by owner Mike Repole, who totally ignored the mandate to be brief and spoke for over 18 minutes. Repole served up a mix of praise and humor to salute his trainer and friend.

“I got into owning race horses 2004, and I watched this young trainer just keep winning races,” Repole said. “I sat there at Aqueuct, Belmont and Saratoga and I watched my horses in the same race as his. What consistently happened after the races, he would walk right by me and go to the winner's circle and I would sit there a loser. If you can't beat him, you join him.”

Repole said that Pletcher belonged in the Hall of Fame of Hall of Famers, the top 1% and predicted that at the age of 54, he would add to his long list of accomplishments.

“He's an icon. He's a legend,” Repole said. “He's going to go down as one of the greatest of all time.”

Pletcher already leads the way with $410 million in purse-money earned. He was the first to reach $300 million and has a $48 million lead over fellow Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen. Pletcher ranks seventh on the career list with 5,157 victories, which include two in the GI Kentucky Derby, three in GI Belmont S. and 11 in the Breeders' Cup.

After years working for Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, Pletcher took out his license in December 1995 and opened a seven-horse stable. He now trains 200 horses.

“I can't tell you how humbled I am to join this esteemed group,” Pletcher said. “So many of these guys were my childhood heroes, role models and mentors, competitors.”

Pletcher noted that Jerry Bailey rode his first winner and that Jose Santos–one of the 14 Hall of Fame members introduced at the ceremony–was up for his first loser.

“Jose, don't feel bad,” Pletcher said, smiling. “I've lost 17,458 more since then.”

Pletcher called Lukas a great mentor.

“After I went out on my own, the most common question I'd get is 'What is one thing that you've learned working for Wayne Lukas?'” Pletcher said. “The answer is: There's not one thing. It's everything. Everything matters. Every horse matters. Every horse owner matters.”

Fearful of forgetting to name and thank someone, and error he said he made in 2004 when accepting his first Eclipse Award, Pletcher called his election to the Hall of Fame a team event. But he made a point of saluting the late Jeff Lukas, his first boss in 1989, who suffered brain injuries when he was run over by a loose horse.

“I feel like no one has been more influential in the way that I try to conduct my business, than Wayne's son Jeff,” Pletcher said. “Jeff was a detail-oriented person. He was driven. He was motivated. He was a skilled horseman and he had the unique ability to make those around him better. There's no doubt in my mind, that if he didn't have a tragic accident that Jeff would have been inducted into the Hall of Fame years ago.”

Breeder-owner Ahmed Zayat and his son Justin accepted American Pharoah's plaque. Trainer Bob Baffert did not attend the event.

“Thank you very much for voting for American Pharoah to be in here,” Zayat said. “This is very, very humbling for us. When I was trying to think of what to talk about–I probably can talk for another two hours about what the American Pharoah meant for me–I realized this is not about the Zayat family. This is about American Pharoah and what American Pharoah achieved.” He said he wanted “to point out  American Pharoah as the people's horse, the horse that excited fans.”

Zayat said he had three distinct memories of the 2015 season: announcer Larry Collmus's call of the GI Belmont S. finish that made American Pharoah the first Triple Crown winner in 37 years followed by the reaction of the crowd; the reception that American Pharoah received at Saratoga, where he galloped on Friday before an estimated crowd of 15,000 the morning before his upset loss in the GI Travers; the hero's tribute upon his arrival at Keeneland where he won the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

“These are memories that I will never forget about what American Pharoah meant for the sport and the public,” Zayat said.

Zayat congratulated the inductees from both classes, including Pletcher who trained some horses for his stable.

“One final thing,” Zayat said. “Thank you, Bob Baffert for just a brilliant training job and for opening your barn for every single person to come and visit American Pharoah.”

Casse had to wait a year for his induction ceremony and he relished the opportunity to thank the people who set him on the path to the Hall of Fame. At the top of the list was his late father, Norman, a trainer and an important figure in the development of Florida's breeding and bloodstock business. Casse took out his license as a teenager and developed into successful trainer. He left the day-to-day competition on the track in the early 1990s to manager Harry Mangurian's farm, but returned several years later to win multiple titles in Canada and become one of the premier trainers in the United States.

Confident, enthusiastic and outgoing, Casse promptly set the stage as he stepped to podium wearing his new Hall of Fame blazer.

“Let me start by saying, I have a better chance of winning the Kentucky Derby that getting through this speech without losing my composure,” he said.

Casse' voice wavered and cracked a bit, but he continued.

“I've been very fortunate in my life to win many big races and awards but nothing greater than this honor,” he said. “The last few weeks, I've spent much time reflecting on the various paths my life has taken. It amazes me that every experience, relationship, conversation with friends, families and clients has molded and shaped my career.  Who would have thought 50 years ago, as I slept over there in the parking lot, the Fasig-Tipton parking lot, with my dad, had breakfast every morning at the Saratoga Snack Shack that I would be standing here today?”

Casse said he would not have made it to the Hall of Fame without having great horses, but that the people who touched his life influenced him the most.

“Obviously, my dad, Norman, greatly encouraged me to follow my passion,” he said “My father was a huge part of my education with horses. And I inherited my love of racing from him. On this journey. Many family members have had to make sacrifices for me to pursue my career, but none greater than my mom.”

At that point, Casse, too emotional to continue, had his wife take over. She read the part describing how when his parents divorced when he was 13 his mother agreed to his request to stay in Florida with his father to be near horses.

Casse returned to the podium and thanked several of his major owners, John and Debby Oxley, Charlotte Weber, Robert Masterson and Gary Barber–all of whom were at the ceremony–for their support.

“In closing, my dad and I first visited the Hall of Fame in 1972 when I was 11,” Casse said. “I still remember walking around with my mouth open in amazement. At the end of the visit I confidently told my dad , 'I'm going to be in here some day.' As any good father would do, he said, 'Yes, Mark you will.'

“Well, we did it.”

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