Joe Takes Federico Tesio With Head Bob Over Stablemate

The Elkstone Group's homebred Joe, Maryland's champion 2-year-old male of 2021, bounced back from having his three-race win streak ended with a determined head victory over stablemate Mr Jefferson in Saturday's $125,000 Federico Tesio at Laurel Park.

The 1 1/8-mile Federico Tesio for 3-year-olds anchored four stakes worth $450,000 in purses on the first of back-to-back Spring Stakes Spectacular Saturdays. Spring Stakes Spectacular continues April 23 with five $100,000 stakes including the first three of the season scheduled for Laurel's world-class turf course.

Named for the noted Italian breeder, owner and trainer whose homebreds Nearco and Ribot dominate Thoroughbred bloodlines around the world, the Tesio for a seventh straight year served as a “Win and In” qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated horses to the 147th Preakness Stakes (G1) May 21 at historic Pimlico Race Course.

A total of 22 Tesio winners have gone on to run in the Preakness, the last being Alwaysmining in 2019. Maryland-bred Deputed Testamony, in 1983, is the only horse to sweep both races. In 2020, Happy Saver won the Tesio for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher as a prelude to his next-out victory over older horses in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1).

Joe, named for President Joe Biden, is not nominated to the Triple Crown. He can be supplemented to the $1.5 million Preakness, middle jewel of the Triple Crown, for $150,000 when entries are taken May 16.

“I'll have to ask Stuart,” winning trainer Mike Trombetta said of Elkstone's Stuart Grant. “Stuart is a very seasoned owner and I'll have to see what his thoughts are on this whole deal, and whether he wants to take a run at it. We'll see how the horse comes back, obviously, but if everything's well, we'll have to ask him if he wants to take a roll. I would love to. It's always exciting.“The horse has done very little wrong. He had one turf race early and he's basically undefeated minus the one start, so I don't know much more you've got to do right to try something like that,” he added. “He's pointing himself in that direction, so it's just a matter of if [Grant] wants to take a stab.”

Joe went off as the 7-5 favorite in a field of nine and broke alertly from post 4 under regular rider Victor Carrasco, flanked around the first turn by 15-1 long shot Vine Jet and claimer-turned-multiple stakes winner Shake Em Loose – who beat Joe in the March 19 Private Terms at Laurel – to his inside and Parx shipper Secret Alliance on his right.

Carrasco had a snug hold on Joe as he moved into a pressing position in second entering the backstretch, with Vine Jet still in front and Secret Alliance to the outside as Shake Em Loose dropped back into fourth. The opening quarter-mile went in :24.94 and the order went unchanged through a half in “48.63.

“Mike didn't give me any instructions. He said, 'You know the horse better than anybody. Do what you think is best and don't get in any trouble,' ” Carrasco said. “I know he was coming into this race in very good form, working well and doing everything right. The doors opened, he was sharp, and I let him slide out of there to make sure we were in a good position going into the first turn.

“I had a nice hold on him, and he just wanted to go. I kept the same hold, not to take him back but not to let him go, either. I kept him in the race. [Vine Jet] started asking at the three-eighths [pole] and I had [Secret Alliance] outside of me. He started asking and he could not get away from me and I'm just sitting. When we got to the quarter pole and I said go, he kind of put his ears up like he was waiting and I was like, 'There's no time to wait,' and he moved nicely.”

Midway around the far turn, Vine Jet began to tire and Joe and Secret Alliance raced side-by-side up front with a new challenger in Smarten Up making a bid three wide and Mr Jefferson, who trailed all but one horse through a half-mile, moving up into contention. Joe edged away from Secret Alliance once straightened for home, with Shake Em Loose trying to rally up the rail and Mr Jefferson looming a threat after splitting horses to get into second.

“When I felt someone coming up on my outside I changed my stick to the left hand at the sixteenth pole and I felt like he found another gear,” Carrasco said. “[Mr Jefferson] did put like a head in front of me. I don't like to go left-handed too much because he likes to drift a little bit, but I had to do it and once I did, he moved on and got it done.”

The winning time was 1:52.30 over a fast main track. It was five lengths back to Shake Em Loose in third, a length ahead of Smarten Up. Secret Alliance, South Street, Noneedtoworry, Baltimore Bulleit and Vine Jet completed the order of finish.

Joe, by Declaration of War out of Battle Bridge, by Arch, returned $4.

“I thought Mr Jefferson was going to go by him,” Trombetta said. “Joe just laid it all out there and he really dug in and fought. I give him a lot of credit. Like I said, he hasn't done anything wrong. He's a pretty tough horse.”

Trombetta was also proud of R. Larry Johnson's Maryland homebred Mr Jefferson, racing for the first time since finishing off the board in the 1 1/8-mile Withers (G3) Feb. 5 at Aqueduct. An optional claiming allowance winner Nov. 4 going 1 1/16 miles at Laurel, Mr Jefferson was fourth in the Remsen (G2) behind Kentucky Derby (G1) contenders Mo Donegal and Zandon, and sixth in the Jerome, also at Aqueduct.

“I always wanted to give him the chance to be a good horse. Honestly I get the feel that some of the New York stuff just didn't work out,” he said. “I'm rooting for both. All these owners are so good to us, all I want them to do is to have fun and try and win some races.”

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Tawny Port Shines In First Win On Dirt In Lexington

Peachtree Stable's Tawny Port drove past the leader with a sixteenth of a mile to run and tallied his first win on dirt in style Saturday in the $400,000 Stonestreet Lexington Stakes (G2) at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky.

The son of Pioneerof the Nile, who secured a spot in the Kentucky Derby (G1) starting gate earlier in the day with the defection of ailing Slow Down Andy, earned an additional 20 qualifying points for the Louisville classic with a one-length triumph while finishing the 1 1/16 mile Lexington in 1:45.24 on a fast track.

The final stop on the road to the Kentucky Derby (G1), the Lexington offered qualifying points on a 20-8-4-2 basis to the top four finishers. Tawny Port entered Saturday's race with 40 points.

With Florent Geroux aboard for trainer Brad Cox, Tawny Port overcame a wide trip throughout after tracking in fifth and then getting shuffled back to eighth as runner-up Major General set early fractions of :23.85 and :48.01 through the opening half mile,

Advancing back to fifth as six furlongs went in 1:12.45, Tawny Port was roused into contention along the far turn and was still four wide into the stretch. Launching a late strong late bid, he drove past a stubborn Major General with an eighth to run and prevailed for a first stakes win.

Major General held second, 1 1/2 lengths in front of third-place finisher In Due Time.

Tawny Port returned $12.

Tawny Port, who had raced almost exclusively on Turfway Park's synthetic surface, came into Saturday's race off a runner-up finish in the Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) at the Northern Kentucky track April 2 after finishing fifth in the Risen Star Stakes (G2) Feb. 19  at Fair Grounds in his first try on dirt.

“He needed the race. (The Risen Star) was his only (previous) start on the dirt (and the race) was definitely the key (prep for) the Kentucky Derby (G1),” Geroux said. “It looked like every horse who ran in there all came back and ran some very strong races, so we were hoping to do the same thing. (Tawny Port did) that today, in a very powerful way at the high end on the dirt. Looks like the distance should be no problem, and I hope the connections will take a swing at (the Derby).”

Updated Kentucky Derby/Oaks leaderboard

Cox said there was a little bit of a question mark with how well Tawny Port would handle the dirt.

“He ran well at the Fair Grounds,” he said. “Florent came back and had positive comments after that race, and I thought, 'Well, you know, right now, maybe you try to go in the Jeff Ruby Steaks.' So that's what we did, and he ran a real respectable race. Then we found ourselves nominated to this race and it worked out today.”

As for a Kentucky Derby bid, Cox said:  “We'll see how he comes out of (today's race). I'd like to congratulate (owners) John and Elizabeth Fort (of Peachtree Stable). This was John's idea, to come back in two weeks immediately after the Jeff Ruby. He said, 'We need to look at this race,' and I said, 'Well, I nominated him.' We watched him and he seemed to have a great energy level and his weight's great. He's a good-looking colt – really good-looking. (John Fort) picked him out.”

Tawny Port was sold to Fort for $430,000 out of the Machmer Hall Sales consignment at the 2020 Keeneland September yearling sale.

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Derby Hopefuls Cyberknife, Tiz The Bomb, Crown Pride Tune Up At Churchill

With three weeks remaining until the $3 million Kentucky Derby (G1), the trio of Crown Pride (six furlongs, 1:18.60), Cyberknife (five furlongs, 1:00), and Tiz the Bomb (four furlongs, :48.40) worked toward their next start in the Run for the Roses on Saturday, May 7.

Gold Square's Arkansas Derby (G1) winner Cyberknife worked at 9 a.m. (ET) outside of multiple stakes-placed stablemate Tommy Bee. Cyberknife started two lengths behind Tommy Bee and completed fractions of :12.20, :23.80, and :47.20. Cyberknife finished even with Tommy Bee around the seven eighths pole and easily galloped out six furlongs in 1:15.40.

“I thought he looked great,” said trainer Brad Cox, who watched the breeze from the Millionaires Row balcony. “He's done well at Churchill in the past and really likes it here.”

About 90 minutes earlier, Magdalena Lessee's Tiz the Bomb, who won the  Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) April 2, worked with jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. in the irons. The duo clipped an opening quarter-mile in :24.20 and galloped out five furlongs in 1:01.20.

Moments later, exercise rider Masa Matsuda breezed Teruya Yoshida's UAE Derby (GII) winner Crown Pride six furlongs from the half-mile pole. The duo easily completed opening fractions of :14.60, :28.20, :54, and 1:06.20. Japan-bred Crown Pride steadily picked up his work around the turn and onto the backside before completing his move through seven furlongs in 1:32.40.

Churchill Downs received about 0.2 inches of rain overnight, according to the National Weather Service. The track was sealed for the first two hours of training but dried out by the 7:30 a.m. track renovation break and was harrowed. It was labeled as “good” for the final 2 ½ hours of training.

In other Kentucky Derby news, Arkansas Derby runner-up Barber Road arrived at Churchill Downs early Saturday morning and is stabled in Barn 46 with trainer John Ortiz. He's scheduled to work twice prior to the Kentucky Derby.

Curlin Florida Derby (GI) runner-up Charge It was scheduled to ship from his South Florida base to Churchill Downs on Saturday. He and the rest of Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher's contingent will be based in Barn 35. Pletcher is planning to keep a full-time barn at Churchill Downs throughout the spring and summer.

Likely Kentucky Derby favorite Epicenter is scheduled to breeze early Sunday at Churchill Downs.

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Mike Smith Compares Taiba To Justify: ‘No Telling What He’s Capable Of’

Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith picked up the mount on Taiba just before the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby, when his previous rider John Velazquez opted to stick with the more-seasoned Messier. After all, the 3-year-old son of Gun Runner had only made one start, a winning effort in a six-furlong maiden special weight for trainer Bob Baffert before being transferred to the care of Tim Yakteen.

No one was as surprised as Smith when Taiba defeated Messier by 2 1/4 lengths. Smith told the Los Angeles Daily News: “He gave me another gear and I was like, 'Whoa!' I mean, he's supposed to be getting tired and not giving me another gear. That's what really blew my mind. That was impressive, that last eighth of a mile.”

Taiba has since drawn comparisons to Triple Crown winner Justify, Smith said. Justify won the Santa Anita Derby in his third lifetime start, then proceeded to become the 13th winner of the Triple Crown before retiring.

Smith believes Taiba has the same amount of talent, though the colt will still have to prove it on the racetrack starting on the first Saturday in May.

“He's a really intelligent horse on top of having that kind of ability,” Smith told the LA Daily News. “That's what makes 'em special. Those type of horses, not only are they so talented, but they have the mind to go with it.

“Imagine if he moves forward off that race? If he does that, no telling what he's capable of.”

Read more at the Los Angeles Daily News.

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