Shake Em Loose Enters Saturday’s Tesio Off Back-To-Back Victories

Rudy Sanchez-Salomon will continue chasing the dream when the owner-trainer sends out his claimer-turned-multiple stakes winner Shake Em Loose in search of a third straight victory and Triple Crown race berth in Saturday's $125,000 Federico Tesio at Laurel Park.

The 41st running of the 1 1/8-mile Federico Tesio headlines a 10-race program featuring 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 serves as a 'Win and In' qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated 3-year-olds to the 147th Preakness Stakes May 21 at historic Pimlico Race Course.

First race post time is 12:40 p.m.

Debuting at Pimlico in 1981 and run there last year while Laurel's main track underwent renovations, the Tesio returns to Laurel where it was held in 1987, 1989 and from 2016-20. 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.

Happy Saver won the Tesio in 2020 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).

Sanchez-Salomon made Shake Em Loose eligible for the Triple Crown races by nominating him before the late March 28 deadline for $6,000. The gelded son of 2013 Malibu (G1) winner Shakin It Up has won three of four starts since being claimed for $16,000 out of a maiden victory last November.

Two of those wins have come in stakes – the seven-furlong Heft at odds of 59-1 racing first time for his new connections to end 2021, and his two-turn debut in the 1 1/16-mile Private Terms March 19 over 2-year-old Maryland-bred champion Joe.

“He's doing great. I hope he's going to run the same as his last couple races here. I've been lucky and blessed, so we'll see,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “I'm a little more confident since the last race, but you never know. It's always another day.”

Shake Em Loose entered the stretch of the Private Terms in front and was able to fend off a rally from Joe to win by 1 ¾ lengths. In his prior start, he made a bold move around the turn to take the lead and rolled by 3 ¾ lengths in a one-mile optional claiming allowance, also at Laurel, where Sanchez-Salomon is based.

“The last race didn't take too much out of him. He did get a little tired right after, because he had to dig down that day but, man, he fought for it. He didn't want to get beat,” he said. “When the other horse got close to him, he switched leads and took off again.”

In his only loss since the claim, Shake Em Loose was unprepared at the start and broke in the air in the seven-furlong Spectacular Bid Jan. 29. Trailing the field at one point, he was never in contention and finished seventh.

“I schooled him a little bit different this time so he got some dirt in his face, which I don't think he minds anyway,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “He's doing as good as he's ever done. Even the one he lost, that was just an unfortunate break that day.”

Charlie Marquez, aboard for the last two starts, gets a return call from Post 2 in a field of nine at topweight of 124 pounds.

“Everybody's got these kinds of dreams. We'll see how high we can set the expectations,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “We're all very, very excited.”

The Elkstone Group's Maryland homebred Joe, named for President Joe Biden, had won three straight races heading into the Private Terms including Laurel's seven-furlong Maryland Juvenile Dec. 18. The Tesio will be his third straight try around two turns, having won impressively in his first attempt by 2 ½ lengths Jan. 23 at Laurel.

“I don't think the distance should bother him,” trainer Michael Trombetta said. “Being a two-turn race, and he's done it now a couple of times, it should be to his benefit.”

Joe raced in mid-pack under jockey Victor Carrasco, trailing by 5 ½ lengths after six furlongs before launching a bid, getting to within a length and a half of Shake Em Loose at the top of the stretch. He appeared to lose momentum when the two got in close proximity near the sixteenth pole and couldn't get by, but finished six lengths ahead of multiple stakes winner Local Motive in third.

“I think it was a combination, quite honestly, of Victor pushing him along a little bit. I don't know if he laid in a little or the eventual winner was drifting out, or a combination of both, but it kind of was a momentum-breaker. I still don't know that I could have beaten that horse anyway, but it might have been a little closer,” Trombetta said. “He did the next-best thing to winning.”

Carrasco, up for each of Joe's five starts, rides back from Post 4 at 118 pounds.

“I still wouldn't be a bit surprised if this horse doesn't run equally well or better on turf when he gets the opportunity, but we'll cross that bridge at a later date,” Trombetta said. “For now, we'll just go one race at a time and see where he takes us.”

Trombetta also entered R. Larry Johnson's Mr Jefferson, another Maryland homebred exiting a pair of off-the-board finishes over wet tracks in the Jan. 1 Jerome and Feb. 5 Withers (G3) at Aqueduct to start the year. Fourth to recent Wood Memorial (G2) winner Mo Donegal in the 1 1/8-mile Remsen (G2) in December, Mr Jefferson won a 1 1/16-mile optional claiming allowance at Laurel in his prior start.

“He should be fresh and ready to go,” Trombetta said. “The last time he had a little issue … so hopefully the addition of Lasix and being back on the Laurel track he should do much, much better.”

Jaime Rodriguez is named to ride from Post 6 at 118 pounds.

The other Triple Crown-nominated horses in the Tesio are Smarten Up and Secret Alliance. Happy Tenth Stable's Smarten Up was a nine-length maiden special weight winner last November at his home track of Parx before finishing second in the Jerome and sixth in the Withers. Most recently, he was beaten a nose when second in the 1 1/16-mile City of Brotherly Love March 8 and was runner up in a one-mile, 70-yard optional claiming allowance March 28, both at Parx.

Alexandria Stable and Carguys Racing's Secret Alliance is a gelded son of two-time Horse of the Year and 2014 Hall of Famer Curlin that also comes in from Parx for Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness (G1)-winning trainer John Servis after graduating in his third try, a six-furlong maiden special weight Feb. 21 by three lengths.

“He's very immature but very talented. He's been dying to go two turns and I've been wanting to get him stretched out, and this looked like the spot,” Servis said. “I couldn't get a long race to go for him and I just wanted to farther than a one-turn mile.”

Secret Alliance has raced exclusively at Parx, getting within a head of the lead in his Dec. 22 debut before finishing second by two lengths. He was fourth after pressing the pace to open his sophomore season Jan. 31 going 6 ½ furlongs, his longest race to date.

“I thought he probably should have won his first start. He ran very green. He was going to the lead at the eighth pole and he ducked in behind the horse in front and the jock had to grab him,” Servis said. “His second start he broke OK and got hustled really hard and I really wasn't happy with that race at all, so it was just kind of a throwout race. Then he came back and ran like I expected him to.

“We've always thought highly of him, and he's trained like a nice horse from the get-go,” he added. “He's matured a lot over the last 60 days. He's only going to get better, but I think he's ready for this test. I really do. He's got a lot of talent.”

Frankie Pennington has the riding assignment from outside Post 9 at 118 pounds.

Completing the field are Pam and Martin Wygod's South Street (Post 5, 118), head winner of a 1 1/8-mile maiden special weight Feb. 24 at Aqueduct for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott; Lugamo Racing Stable's Baltimore Bulleit (Post 3, 118), exiting a 7 ¼-length maiden claiming triumph March 13 at Laurel for leading trainer Claudio Gonzalez; Felissa Dunn's Vine Jet (Post 1, 120), a winner of two straight including a one-mile, 70-yard optional claiming allowance March 29 at Parx; and Emerald Racing Stable's Noneedtoworry (Post 8, 118), off the board in the Withers and Gotham (G3) but only beaten a half-length when second to Vine Jet last out.

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Lexington: Tawny Port Chasing Derby Points, Ethereal Road Wheels Back Off Short Rest

Peachtree Stable's Tawny Port, runner-up in the Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) in his most recent start, heads a field of 11 3-year-olds entered Wednesday for Saturday's 40th running of the $400,000 Stonestreet Lexington (G3) Stakes at Keeneland, held over 1 1/16 miles on the main track.

The Stonestreet Lexington will go as the ninth race on Saturday's program with a 5:16 p.m. ET post time. First post is 1 p.m.

The race serves as the final points race on the Road to the Kentucky Derby (G1) with 34 points up for grabs on a 20-8-4-2 scale to the first- through fourth-place finishers. The Derby is limited to the top 20 point earners that pass the entry box.

Trained by Brad Cox, Tawny Port picked up 40 points for his Jeff Ruby finish, a figure that is good for 20th place on the Road to the Derby leaderboard. Florent Geroux has the mount Saturday and will exit post nine.

Two other entrants, Julie Gilbert and Aaron Sones' Ethereal Road and Edge Racing, Medallion Racing and Parkland Thoroughbreds' In Due Time, have accumulated 20 points and could enhance their Derby prospects with a victory Saturday.

Ethereal Road wheels back seven days after finishing seventh in the Toyota Blue Grass (G1). Second in the Rebel (G2) to pick up his 20 points, Ethereal Road is trained by D. Wayne Lukas and will break from post four under Victor Espinoza.

In Due Time picked up his 20 Derby points with the runner-up finish in the Fountain of Youth (G2) for trainer Kelly Breen. Paco Lopez retains the mount and will break from post two.

The field for the Stonestreet Lexington with riders and weights from the rail out, is:

  1. Midnight Chrome (Jose Ortiz, 118 pounds)
  2. In Due Time (Lopez, 118)
  3. We All See It (Luis Saez, 118)
  4. Ethereal Road (Espinoza, 118)
  5. Howling Time (Joe Talamo, 118)
  6. Skate to Heaven (David Cohen, 118)
  7. Major General (Irad Ortiz Jr., 118)
  8. Strava (Tyler Gaffalione, 118)
  9. Tawny Port (Florent Geroux, 118)
  10. Dash Attack (Flavien Prat, 120)
  11. Call Me Midnight (James Graham, 120)

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The Derby Bubble Presented By Kentucky-Breds: Did Mo Donegal, Taiba, Or Zandon Soar Highest With Signature Wins?

The Kentucky Derby is fast approaching, which means it's time for detailed looks at the horses that could fill the starting gate with Andrew Champagne of Catena Media and The Saratogian's Pink Sheet.

Check the Paulick Report every week for updated rankings that include news, notes, and opinions on the 3-year-olds that figure to take center stage.

The 100-point Kentucky Derby preps have come and gone. All that's left on the road to the Run for the Roses is Saturday's Grade 3 Lexington Stakes at Keeneland, which serves as a last resort for connections with horses on the outside looking in.

As you may expect given the results of this past weekend, there are some pretty major shifts in these rankings.

Let's dive right in!

Kentucky-bred contenders will be highlighted in red, and will receive additional analysis into their breeders, broodmares, and auction histories. Pedigree notes are written by Joe Nevills.

#1: Epicenter

Pedigree: Not This Time – Silent Candy (by Candy Ride)

Owner: Winchell Thoroughbreds

Trainer: Steve Asmussen

Kentucky Derby points: 164

Epicenter didn't just win the G2 Louisiana Derby. He did it in exactly the right way. He showed he could rate just off the speed, even taking some dirt in his face going up the backstretch. When called upon, he swooped past the front-runners and had plenty left late. It was as perfect a final prep as the connections could've hoped for, and he may very well be your Kentucky Derby favorite.

Epicenter was bred in Kentucky by Westwind Farms, out of the Grade 3-placed stakes winner Silent Candy. He sold for $260,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. Westwind Farms bought Silent Candy pregnant to Scat Daddy for $130,000 in 2014.

#2: Taiba

Pedigree: Gun Runner – Needmore Flattery (by Flatter)

Owner: Zedan Racing Stables

Trainer: Tim Yakteen

Kentucky Derby points: 100

An unraced maiden less than six weeks ago, Taiba emerged as a possible Kentucky Derby favorite with a win in Saturday's G1 Santa Anita Derby. He topped stablemate Messier and San Felipe winner Forbidden Kingdom and did so in professional fashion, looking like anything but a lightly-raced 3-year-old going two turns for the first time. Can a horse with just two starts under his belt win the Kentucky Derby? We'll find out in just a few short weeks.

Taiba was bred in Kentucky by Bruce Ryan, out of the 14-time stakes-winning Flatter mare Needmore Flattery. The dam was a homebred for Ryan and Tim Hamm's Blazing Meadows Farm. Taiba sold as a yearling for $140,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale, and he later brought $1.7 million at the following year's Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Selected 2-Year-Olds In Training Sale.

#3: Zandon

Pedigree: Upstart – Memories Prevail (by Creative Cause)

Owner: Jeff Drown

Trainer: Chad Brown

Kentucky Derby points: 114

I took Zandon out of the rankings last week due to an influx of 100-point horses. It had nothing to do with Zandon's talent or potential, but he needed to run well in the G1 Blue Grass to make the field. In rallying from way back beneath a masterful ride from Flavien Prat, he did just that and showed a lot of the traits one looks for in a potential Derby horse. Brown has yet to win the Derby, and this may be one of the better chances he's had to date.

Zandon was bred in Kentucky by Brereton C. Jones of Airdrie Stud, and the colt is the first foal to race out of the unraced dam. Zandon sold as a yearling for $170,000 from the Airdrie Stud consignment.

#4: Messier

Pedigree: Empire Maker – Checkered Past (by Smart Strike)

Owner: SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Robert Masterson, Jay Schoenfarber, Waves Edge Capital, Catherine Donovan, Golconda Stable, and Siena Farm

Trainer: Tim Yakteen

Kentucky Derby points: 40

I can't ding Messier too much for losing to Taiba in the Santa Anita Derby. He wasn't far off a pretty fast pace, and he was 10 lengths clear of that day's third-place finisher. It's entirely possible he needed the race off of a brief freshening, and as nice as it would've been to win it, it was another Derby that's long been the main goal for these connections. In running second, Messier punched his ticket to that dance, and he'll have every chance to turn the tables on his stablemate in that event.

#5: White Abarrio

Pedigree: Race Day – Catching Diamonds (by Into Mischief)

Owner: C2 Racing Stable and La Milagrosa Stable

Trainer: Saffie Joseph, Jr.

Kentucky Derby points: 112

White Abarrio jumped up a few spots after his win in the G1 Florida Derby, where he topped Charge It, Simplification, and Classic Causeway, among others. He's never lost at Gulfstream Park, and if his Florida form travels to Kentucky with him, he'll have every chance to give his young trainer his first Kentucky Derby victory.

White Abarrio was bred in Kentucky by Spendthrift Farm, and he is the first foal out of the Into Mischief mare Catching Diamonds. He sold as a newly-turned yearling for $7,500 at the 2020 OBS Winter Mixed Sale. Spendthrift purchased Catching Diamonds as a yearling for $425,000.

#6: Smile Happy

Pedigree: Runhappy – Pleasant Smile (by Pleasant Tap)

Owner: Lucky Seven Stable

Trainer: Ken McPeek

Kentucky Derby points: 70

Similar to Messier, who maintains a high spot despite losing to Taiba, I can't knock Smile Happy too much for his runner-up finish in the Blue Grass. He was wide around both turns and close to the pace on a day where Keeneland's main track wasn't kind to early speed. He still ran well, but was just second-best on the day. We know Smile Happy likes Churchill Downs, and the Derby will be the third start of his form cycle. He has every chance to be sitting on his best race when it matters most.

Smile Happy was bred in Kentucky by Moreau Bloodstock International Inc. and White Bloodstock LLC, out of the winning Pleasant Tap mare Pleasant Smile, whose four starters are all winners, also including the stakes-placed Wilko Rum, by Wilko. Smile Happy sold as a weanling for $175,000 at the 2019 Keeneland November Sale, and later brought $185,000 at the Keeneland September Sale.

#7: Charge It

Pedigree: Tapit – I'll Take Charge (by Indian Charlie)

Owner: Whisper Hill Farm

Trainer: Todd Pletcher

Kentucky Derby points: 40

Charge It made just the third start of his young career in the Florida Derby, which doubled as his first try around two turns. He ran in spurts, but did enough to finish second and sew up a spot in the Kentucky Derby field. Several accomplished horses finished behind him on Saturday, and given his inexperience, he's certainly got the potential to move forward. Add in the presence of Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, and you have a runner that merits plenty of attention.

Charge It is a Kentucky homebred for Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm, out of the Indian Charlie mare I'll Take Charge. Pope bought the dam as a yearling for $2.2 million at the 2013 Keeneland September sale.

#8: Mo Donegal

Pedigree: Uncle Mo – Callingmissbrown (by Pulpit)

Owner: Donegal Racing

Trainer: Todd Pletcher

Kentucky Derby points: 112

Mo Donegal returned to the scene of his best win to date Saturday and did himself one better. The winner of last year's G2 Remsen added the G2 Wood Memorial beneath a perfectly-timed move from jockey Joel Rosario, who ran down Early Voting in the shadow of the wire. Rosario likely won't be aboard in Kentucky, but likely rider Irad Ortiz, Jr., is as good a replacement as one can hope to find at this stage.

Mo Donegal was bred in Kentucky by Ashview Farm and Colts Neck Stables. He brought $250,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September sale.

#9: Cyberknife

 

Pedigree: Gun Runner – Awesome Flower (by Flower Alley)

Owner: Gold Square LLC

Trainer: Brad Cox

Kentucky Derby points: 100

Cyberknife punched his ticket to Kentucky with a win in the G1 Arkansas Derby. Unlike heavy favorite Secret Oath and runner-up Barber Road, Cyberknife had a clean trip and made the most of it. His record looks far better if you toss the dud he ran in the G3 Lecomte, and just a few weeks after having no 3-year-olds on the Derby leaderboard, Cox now has a pair in the field.

Cyberknife was bred in Kentucky by Ken and Sarah Ramsey, out of the Grade 2-placed stakes winner Awesome Flower, who the Ramseys claimed for $30,000 at Gulfstream Park in 2012. The colt sold for $400,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearling Sale.

#10: Early Voting

Pedigree: Gun Runner – Amour d'Ete (by Tiznow)

Owner: Klaravich Stables

Trainer: Chad Brown

Kentucky Derby points: 50

Early Voting did everything but win in the Wood Memorial. While he made the lead, he had to work to get there, and he still had nearly enough to repel the challenge of Mo Donegal. These connections once skipped the Derby with a lightly-raced horse that went on to win the Preakness (Cloud Computing, in 2017), but as Brown noted in an interview with DRF's David Grening, the owner/trainer tag team had another Derby horse that year (Practical Joke).

Early Voting was bred in Kentucky by Three Chimneys Farm, and he sold as a yearling for $200,000. Three Chimneys bought Amour d'Ete, a half-sister to top sire Speightstown, as a yearling for $1.75 million.

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#11: Simplification

Pedigree: Not This Time – Simply Confection (by Candy Ride)

Owner: Tami Bobo

Trainer: Antonio Sano

Kentucky Derby points: 74

Simplification finished third behind White Abarrio and Charge It in the Florida Derby, and in an age where many top 3-year-olds will have two preps under their belts, it's impressive to see four here. He won the G2 Fountain of Youth and Mucho Macho Man and was second in the G3 Holy Bull.

#12: Zozos

Pedigree: Munnings – Papa's Forest (by Forestry)

Owner: Barry and Joni Butzow

Trainer: Brad Cox

Kentucky Derby points: 40

Zozos ran well when second in the Louisiana Derby. He set a legitimate pace under pressure, and while he was no match for Epicenter, he held second and secured enough points to get him to Kentucky. The pedigree doesn't exactly scream “a mile and a quarter,” but the 1 3/16-mile distance of the Louisiana Derby didn't seem like too much of a problem. With only three starts under his belt, he may have more room to improve.

Zozos is a Kentucky homebred for Barry and Joni Butzow, out of the winning Forestry mare Papa's Forest. The Butzows purchased Papa's Forest as a yearling for $57,000 at the 2011 Keeneland September sale, and she made $233,593 on the racetrack.

#13: Barber Road

Pedigree: Race Day – Encounter (by Southern Image)

Owner: WSS Racing, LLC

Trainer: John Ortiz

Kentucky Derby points: 58

There's something to be said for a horse that just doesn't run a bad race. With the exception of his debut, he's never been worse than third, and that includes five starts in stakes company. He salvaged second behind Cyberknife in the Arkansas Derby, and in doing so, he earned enough Derby points to make the field.

Barber Road was bred in Kentucky by Susan Forrester and Judy Curry, out of the unplaced Southern Image mare Encounter. The mare was a $1,000 purchase out of the 2015 Keeneland November Sale by Scott Conlee, who bred Encounter's future foals in partnership with Forrester and Curry until the latter two acquired full ownership. Barber Road sold as a weanling for $15,000 at the 2019 Keeneland November Sale.

#14: Tiz the Bomb

Pedigree: Hit it a Bomb – Tiz the Key (by Tiznow)

Owner: Magdalena Racing

Trainer: Ken McPeek

Kentucky Derby points: 110

All systems appear “go” for Tiz the Bomb to try dirt again on the biggest stage possible. After an early-season misfire, he won back-to-back Derby preps over Turfway Park's synthetic surface, including the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks (now a 100-point prep). He's got tons of talent, and the distance shouldn't be an issue given his pedigree…but can he run on dirt?

Tiz the Bomb was bred in Kentucky by Spendthrift Farm, out of the winning Tiznow mare Tiz the Key. McPeek, acting as agent, purchased Tiz the Bomb for $330,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Select Yearling Sale. Spendthrift bought Tiz the Key as a yearling for the same price at the 2012 Keeneland September Sale.

#15: Morello

Pedigree: Classic Empire – Stop the Wedding (by Congrats)

Owner: Blue Lion Thoroughbreds, Craig Taylor, and Diamond T Racing

Trainer: Steve Asmussen

Kentucky Derby points: 50

Morello lost all chance at the start of the Wood Memorial and ran last in that event. It was his first start around two turns, and while it's easy to say the race is a throw-out given his poor break, he also didn't do anything to answer the question, “can he go long?” His connections haven't ruled out a spot in the Derby, though, and he'd be safely in the field should they chart a course for that event.

Morello was bred in Kentucky by Robert B. Tillyer and Dr. Chet Blackey, out of the Congrats mare Stop the Wedding. The colt sold as a weanling for $140,000 at the 2019 Keeneland November Sale, then he brought $200,000 at the following year's Fasig-Tipton Select Yearling Sale. In 2021, Morello sold for $250,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale. Stop the Wedding was an $11,000 purchase, pregnant to Cairo Prince, by Tillyer at the 2020 Keeneland January Sale.

#16: Un Ojo

Pedigree: Laoban – Risk a Chance (by A.P. Indy)

Owner: Cypress Creek Equine

Trainer: Ricky Courville

Kentucky Derby points: 54

Un Ojo had a very rough trip in the Arkansas Derby, and he's got a set of staples in his left shoulder to show for it. His connections are still hopeful he'll be ready for the Derby. Should he be in good shape leading up to the race, his upset win in the G2 Rebel means he'll have more than enough points to go postward.

#17: Slow Down Andy

Pedigree: Nyquist – Edwina E (by Square Eddie)

Owner: Reddam Racing

Trainer: Doug O'Neill

Kentucky Derby points: 60

Best known for topping Messier in the G2 Los Alamitos Futurity last year, Slow Down Andy punched his ticket to Kentucky with a win in the G3 Sunland Park Derby. Even though, “who did he beat in New Mexico?,” is a very valid question, it's worth noting O'Neill has won the Derby twice. He conditioned Hot Rod Charlie to a second-place finish a season ago.

#18: Tawny Port

Pedigree: Pioneerof the Nile – Livi Makenzie (by Macho Uno)

Owner: Peachtree Stable

Trainer: Brad Cox

Kentucky Derby points: 40

Saturday's a big day for team Tawny Port. Just two weeks after running second in the Jeff Ruby Steaks, he'll go postward for the Lexington needing a top-four finish to secure his spot in the Kentucky Derby field. While he's run well in three starts at Turfway (with two wins prior to running second to Tiz the Bomb), his lone try on dirt to date was a distant fifth behind Epicenter in the G2 Risen Star.

Tawny Port was bred in Kentucky by WinStar Farm, out of the Grade 2-placed stakes winner Livi Makenzie. The colt sold to Fort for $430,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. WinStar Farm bought Livi Makenzie as a broodmare prospect for $190,000 at the 2014 Keeneland November Sale, and the operation sold her pregnant to Always Dreaming for $30,000 at the same sale in 2020.

#19: Crown Pride

Pedigree: Reach the Crown – Emmy's Pride (by King Kamehameha)

Owner: Teruya Yoshida

Trainer: Koichi Shintani

Kentucky Derby points: 100

With his win in the Group 2 UAE Derby, Crown Pride ensured himself a spot in the Kentucky Derby field. Given the focus on stamina and longevity within the Japanese breeding program, it seems likely they'll win a Derby at some point. I'm just not sure this is the year that happens.

#20: Summer Is Tomorrow

Pedigree: Summer Front – Always Tomorrow (by Badge of Silver)

Owner: Michael and Negar Burke

Trainer: Bhupat Seemar

Kentucky Derby points: 40

The connections of the UAE Derby runner-up have said they're planning to ship to Kentucky, since their colt has enough points to make the field. He's won two of seven starts in Dubai ahead of his trip to the U.S., and based on his current resume, it's tough to see him as anything other than the longest of longshots.

Summer Is Tomorrow was bred in Kentucky by Brereton Jones of Airdrie Stud, out of the winning Badge of Silver mare Always Tomorrow, who Jones bought for $20,000 at the 2015 Keeneland January Sale. The colt initially sold as a weanling for $25,000 at the 2019 Keeneland November Sale, and he later brought $169,743 at the 2021 Arqana Deauville Breeze Up Sale.

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‘No Ill Feelings’: Medina Spirit Owner Amr Zedan Returns To Kentucky Derby With Lightly-Raced Taiba

One year after his colt Medina Spirit crossed the wire first in the Kentucky Derby, owner Amr Zedan will return to the first Saturday in May with another promising 3-year-old in Taiba, winner of the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby.

Despite the saga of the intervening months – from the announcement of a positive test for betamethasone, Medina Spirit's sudden death after a workout, and the recent disqualification and 90-day ban of trainer Bob Baffert – Zedan tells the Thoroughbred Daily News he isn't feeling resentful ahead of the first Saturday in May.

“I go into the Kentucky Derby with absolutely no ill feelings toward anyone,” Zedan told TDN. “I carry no grudges. I just keep walking, keep going. The due process is in process and I firmly believe that when it comes to our case we will have a satisfactory ending to to the saga. Absolutely, there will be no sense of redemption or wanting to get even with anybody.”

Taiba, the lightly-raced son of Gun Runner, was a $1.7 million purchase at the Fasig-Tipton Florida Select sale of 2-year-olds in training. Saddled by Baffert for his debut on March 5, the colt dominated a six-furlong maiden special weight race by 7 1/2 lengths.

When Baffert's suspension began on April 4, Taiba was among those transferred to the care of trainer Tim Yakteen, a former Baffert assistant. Yakteen and bloodstock agent Gary Young recommended that Taiba not be entered in the Santa Anita Derby, but Zedan had faith.

“Amr was just over the moon,” Yakteen told Santa Anita publicity after Taiba's win in the 100-point Derby prep. “All the credit obviously has to go to him (for running the horse), because in my professional opinion, I advised him to take a different route in Taiba's next start.

“But Amr made an educated decision, based on the information that was given him, and it resulted in a big pay day ($450,000 to the winner). All the credit goes to him on this.”

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