Mind Control Snaps Losing Streak With Win In Nerud Stakes At Belmont

Mind Control had not seen the inside of a winner's circle since March 2020 when he won the Grade 3 Tom Fool Handicap at Aqueduct Racetrack in New York, N.Y. The 5-year-old horse had gotten close in his last eight starts, finishing second to Mischevious Alex in the Carter Handicap at Aqueduct back in April. Sunday, Mind Control dueled with favorite Firenze Fire throughout the seven furlongs of the Grade 2 John A. Nerud Stakes at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., never letting Firenze Fire get more than a half-length on him before battling back to win by a head and earn both a trip to the winner's circle and to the Breeders' Cup Sprint at Del Mar Nov. 6.

From the break, it was all Firenze Fire and Mind Control, with American Power and Top Speed a length behind them. The two leaders battled through the first quarter in :23.05 and then the half-mile in :46.03, with Three Technique and Top Speed still within a length of the leaders until the stretch.

As they came out of the turn, Firenze Fire and Mind Control pulled away from the rest of the field, two lengths in front of the other four, but Firenze Fire on the rail could not shake Mind Control, who battled back for a head advantage. At the wire, the difference between a third straight victory for Firenze Fire and a long overdue trip to the winner's circle for Mind Control was a head. Three Technique, Top Seed, Wicked Trick, and American Power rounded out the field. The final time for the seven furlongs was 1:21.94.

Find the race's chart here.

Mind Control paid $12.60, $3.40, and $2.80. Firenze Fire paid $2.30 and $2.10. Three Technique paid $3.10 to show.

The Grade 2 John A. Nerud Stakes is a Win and You're In event for the 2021 Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Sprint at Del Mar in Del Mar, Calif. on Nov. 6. Winners received a guaranteed spot in the starting gate with all fees paid for the corresponding Breeders' Cup race.

Winning rider John Velazquez knew that Mind Control could get the win today.  “I told Todd that if he broke well, I was going to use him to get into a good position. I knew Irad [Ortiz, Jr. aboard Firenze Fire] had to be pushed coming out of there, and if someone else wanted to go crazy then I would sit off of them. I knew there was enough speed, so I used him well enough to put his head in front and then Irad come after me. It was a two-horse race. That's the way it turned out and my horse was better than the other one today.”

Trainer Todd Pletcher knew that the break was key to winning the Nerud. “The first quarter was reasonable. We weren't necessarily intent on getting the lead but we did want to make sure we got away cleanly. You can't let a horse like Firenze Fire get away with an easy lead, so we were happy to see him [Mind Control] break alertly. He ran a great race.”

Mind Control is a 5-year-old horse by Stay Thirsty out of the mare Feel That Fire, by Lightnin N Thunder. He was bred in Kentucky by Red Oak Stable and is owned by Red Oak and Madaket Stables. The G2 Nerud is his eighth victory in 21 starts for career earnings of $1,259,229.

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Pletcher Eyes Whitney For Happy Saver, Prepares Following Sea For Haskell

Hall of Fame Trainer Todd Pletcher sent out Wertheimer and Frere's Happy Saver and Repole Stable and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners' Moretti to finish third and fourth, respectively, in Saturday's Grade 2 Suburban at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

Happy Saver, who bested Mystic Guide in the Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup in October at Belmont, entered Saturday's test undefeated in five starts.

Leaving from the outermost post 6 in the Suburban under Irad Ortiz, Jr., Happy Saver tracked in fourth position, outside of Mystic Guide, as Moretti set the early splits.

Mystic Guide made a strong inside move into the turn but the four-wide Happy Saver failed to fire his best shot, closing to complete the trifecta as Max Player upset Mystic Guide by a neck.

“I thought Happy Saver ran well,” said Pletcher. “He was stuck wide the whole way around there from that post. It was a little bit of a tricky start but I thought he put in an honest effort. They both came back very well.”

Pletcher said he'll take some time to consider options, although the nine-furlong $1 million Grade 1 Whitney Stakes on August 7 at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. is a possibility.

“We'll see how he bounces out of it and consider the Whitney and the Jockey Club and play it by ear,” said Pletcher.

The Whitney offers a “Win and You're In” berth to the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic at Del Mar in Del Mar, Calif.

A number of Pletcher stars were on the work tab Sunday at Belmont, including Spendthrift Farm's Following Sea, a Runhappy colt, who is pointed to the nine-furlong $1 million Grade 1 Haskell Invitational on July 17 at Monmouth Park.

Following Sea breezed five-eighths in 1:00.80 over a dirt training track rated good.

“He breezed well and we're still on target for the Haskell,” said Pletcher.

Pletcher said Shadwell Stable's Malathaat, who worked a half-mile in :49.49 on the dirt training track, remains on target for the $500,000 Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks, a nine-furlong test for sophomore fillies on July 24 at Saratoga

“She looked great. Everything is going smoothly with her,” said Pletcher.

Shadwell Stable's Mahaamel, who was slated to start in Monday's $250,000 Grade 3 Dwyer, was clocked in :49.90 on the dirt training track.

“We were thinking about the Dwyer and unfortunately he got a bit of a cough and knocked us off a breeze last week. We'll consider an allowance race for him,” said Pletcher.

Pletcher's potential starters in Saturday's Turf Triple series races breezed a half-mile Sunday on the dirt training track with Con Lima [:50.59] targeting the $700,000 Grade 1 Belmont Oaks and CHC and WinStar Farm's Sainthood [:49.65] eyeing a turf debut in the $ 1 million Grade 1 Belmont Derby.

“They both breezed well and are on track for next weekend,” said Pletcher.

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Joseph Graffeo, Del Toro, Eric Nikolaus, and Troy Johnson's Con Lima is exiting a sharp win in the nine-furlong Grade 3 Wonder Again on June 3 on the Belmont turf, while Sainthood captured an off-the-turf edition of the Grade 3 Pennine Ridge on May 29.

“We were hoping to get that turf try in the Pennine Ridge but it ended up working out OK, so we'll find out next week,” said Pletcher.

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Mystic Guide Returns in Suburban

Godolphin homebred Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper), off since winning the G1 Dubai World Cup in March, makes his stateside return in the GII Suburban S. at Belmont Park Saturday. The Suburban, a 'Win and You're In' race for the GI Breeders' Cup Classic, will feature a rematch between the handsome chestnut and Happy Saver (Super Saver), who bested him by 3/4 lengths in last year's GI Jockey Club Gold Cup.

In addition to his runner-up effort in the Gold Cup last October, Mystic Guide's 3-year-old campaign also included a win in the GII Jim Dandy S. He prepped for his trip to Dubai with a six-length romp over a sloppy track in the Feb. 27 GIII Razorback H., for which he earned a 108 Beyer Speed Figure.

“Obviously, we don't really know how much the sloppy track played into that number,” said trainer Mike Stidham. “He came back in the Dubai World Cup and made the number look like it was real, which was good. We've given him plenty of time and he's had three months since that race to bounce back. Looking at him train and his weight and his coat, he's an absolute picture right now.”

Wertheimer and Frere's Happy Saver is now unbeaten in five career starts after returning from his Gold Cup win last fall with a one-mile allowance tally at Belmont May 28. The 4-year-old debuted a winner last June at Belmont and added a Saratoga allowance victory July 26 before winning the Sept. 7 Federico Tesio S.

“I think as an older horse he's a little more laid back in some of his works,” trainer Todd Pletcher said of Happy Saver. “He always performs well and he's really filled out and matured. For the way he ran in the Jockey Club Gold Cup last year, he's proven he likes that distance and that race looks even stronger now with what Mystic Guide has done.”

Of Mystic Guide's rematch with Happy Saver, Stidham said, “The bottom line is that they're both very good horses. I'm not taking anything for granted. I know Happy Saver has never been beaten and it won't be an easy race for us. I just hope we have the best horse.”

Pletcher also saddles Repole Stable and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners' Moretti (Medaglia d'Oro), who was second behind Tacitus (Tapit) in last year's Suburban. The 5-year-old was a front-running victor of the 1 3/4-mile Birdstone S. last August in his final 2020 outing. He resurfaced with a third-place effort in the 1 1/2-mile GII Brooklyn S. at Belmont June 5.

“The farther the better for him,” said Pletcher. “He ran OK in here last year and this would be a nice bridge to the Birdstone to try and defend his title there.”

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This Side Up: Happy Days Here Again

A year that began with the loss of two of the most lavish, Prince Khaled Abdullah and Sheikh Hamdan al Maktoum, is aptly measuring the reinvigoration of the breed achieved by modern investors from the same deserts where it first took root. Godolphin owes Derby wins at both Epsom and the Curragh to colts by Prince Khaled's greatest bequest, Frankel (GB); while its U.S. division laid down a marker of continuity and vitality when Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper) won the G1 Dubai World Cup just three days after its founder's brother was laid to rest in a nearby cemetery.

While Sheikh Hamdan's own bloodstock empire, Shadwell, begins to evolve its future strategies under his daughter, Sheikha Hissa, its American arm has been emulating the momentum of Godolphin. (That stable, remember, may be headed by Sheikh Mohammed, but Sheikh Hamdan contributed significantly to its development). Both have a Classic winner apiece, in Malathaat (Curlin) and Essential Quality (Tapit), while last Saturday both also won Grade II prizes within barely an hour, Zaajel (Street Sense) in the Mother Goose S. and Maxfield (Street Sense) in the Stephen Foster S.

Malathaat and Zaajel attest to the wisdom of the choice made by Sheikh Hamdan last year, on the retirement from training of Kiaran McLaughlin. Todd Pletcher increasingly has the look of the safest pair of hands in the country, having meanwhile also been selected by the powerful owners of Life Is Good (Into Mischief), Country Grammer (Tonalist) and Following Sea (Runhappy) as sanctuary from the Bob Baffert storm.

As we've remarked before, Pletcher remains closer in age to Chad Brown and Brad Cox than to Baffert, and certainly has many miles left on the clock relative to the achievements that secured him the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. It's good to see the holder of a record seven Eclipse Awards reminding his younger rivals, who won the last five between them, that he remains a master in his prime.

Pletcher has already produced a juvenile to set the pre-Saratoga standard in Double Thunder (Super Saver), last-to-first winner of the GIII Bashford Manor S. last weekend after pardonably gasping through an opening quarter of :21 flat. Now he saddles another son of Super Saver, the unbeaten Happy Saver, as the obvious danger when Mystic Guide makes his first appearance since Dubai in the GII Suburban S. at Belmont Saturday.

With Double Thunder scoring on the same card as Mexican sensation Letruska, Super Saver is certainly having one of those finger-wagging spells we know to expect from exported stallions. His sale to Turkey at the end of 2019 was announced the same day as that of Daredevil, who promptly earned repatriation with a GI Kentucky Oaks one-two and a GI Preakness S. success. But Super Saver, being five years older, is presumably gone beyond recall.

It must be tough for the guys at WinStar–who of course bred Super Saver, as well as Double Thunder–to see the caliber of stock left behind by both stallions. But it wasn't really WinStar who exported Daredevil. The market did. That spring, he had received just 21 mares. And while Super Saver did manage a book of 136, the wind had meanwhile turned against him. At the yearling sales, his median sank from $75,000 the previous year to $28,500: pretty disastrous, against a $50,000 conception fee. Daredevil, after all, had himself covered 140 mares only the previous year. Once the commercial market pulls that plug, it's damned hard to push it back.

Be all that as it may, it's heartening to see Runhappy recovering so persuasively from a slow start with his first crop; and let's hope that Happy Saver can also go on and give himself a real chance at stud. Because it certainly feels important that Super Saver has heirs recycling his genes in Kentucky: besides extending the precarious branch of the Raise A Native line through Majestic Prince, he also represents a noble Ogden Phipps family.

(Another of his sons, incidentally, had a Chilean Group 1 winner last weekend. Competitive Edge was moved on from Ashford last year, with only a second crop of juveniles on the track, but stands in the top 10 third-crop sires and duly remains entitled to thrive at his new base in Texas).

Happy Saver, homebred by the Wertheimer brothers, doubles down his stud potential by introducing none other than Weekend Surprise as his third dam. (Her son A.P. Indy, remember, is Super Saver's damsire). So there was a real premium on that fast-track Grade I success last fall, when Happy Saver beat Mystic Guide in only his fourth start in the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup.

Those of us who treasure the heritage of races like the Suburban will be anxious to see this rematch restore due resonance to annals formerly crowded by many of the most evocative names in the American breed: from the likes of Ben Brush, Imp and Beldame, in the old Sheepshead Bay days, to a golden sequence in the 1950s and 1960s encompassing Tom Fool, Nashua, Bold Ruler, Sword Dancer, Kelso, Buckpasser and Dr. Fager. Let's hope that a race relegated to Grade II status in 2009 can redeem its lack of quantity with some authentic quality.

Those glorious old names remind us again how the world has changed, with horses today often bred and trained like porcelain. A wearily familiar complaint, perhaps, but one that needs reprising on a weekend when the G1 Eclipse S. in Britain drew four starters and the GIII Los Alamitos Derby had to be reopened. What a pleasure, then, to see throwback Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior) tackle another significant new recruit to Pletcher's barn, Mind Control (Stay Control), in the GII John A. Nerud S. on the Independence Day program.

Firenze Fire has won 14 of 33 starts in compiling just short of $2.5 million. Yes, he started out with a trainer who has some fast talking to do, if he is not to become a lasting shorthand for much that is wrong with our sport. But the horse has found wholesome rehabilitation with Kelly Breen, becoming another real feather in that snap-brim fedora over the cheerful face of New Jersey racing. Breen has favored the veteran sprinter with the first real break of his career, and brought him back as good as ever in his fifth campaign. Round a circuit he adores, maybe Firenze Fire can remind seven-for-20 millionaire Mind Control that he is, by comparison, only just getting going.

It's a striking showdown, for sure: between a former steam-fitting apprentice who learned the ropes under Mid-Atlantic stalwarts like Ben Perkins, Sr. and John Forbes, and the meticulous interpreter of the D. Wayne Lukas revolution who put the “super” into the “super trainer” concept–with notably apt dividends when Super Saver won the Derby.

It wouldn't be too hard to choose between Breen and Pletcher, if you were casting the roles of snappy dresser Fonzie and clean-cut Richie Cunningham. But, however the script unfolds between them, at least the holiday weekend offers us horses and horsemen alike eligible to restore something like Happy Days.

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