Tiz The Bomb Just Holds Off Stolen Base To Take Battaglia

Tiz the Bomb got back to his winning ways in the John Battaglia Memorial Stakes at Turfway Park on March 5, holding off a late charge from Stolen Base at the wire.

The Ken McPeek trainee, who was favored at 8-5, earned ten points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby. The Battaglia carried a value of 10-4-2-1 to top four finishers.

Updated Kentucky Derby/Oaks Leaderboard

Tiz the Bomb and jockey Alex Achard hustled out of the gate but faced a wall of horses and had to go four wide into the first turn in the 1 1/16-mile contest. They settled mid-pack, well off the early pace set by La Belleza Negra and Erase. Achard started asking his mount for run just after the field posted a half-mile fraction of :48.18, picking off rivals on the outside as they entered the turn, swinging four wide into the stretch. Tiz the Bomb continued driving through the stretch, just edging a late flight from Stolen Base by a neck.

Stolen Base was second and Grael was third.

Tiz the Bomb paid $5.20, $4.20, and $3.20.

The final time was 1:44.12, with fractions of 23.97, :48.18, 1:12.44, and 1:37.62. See the full chart here.

Tiz the Bomb was second in last year's G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf, but finished a disappointing seventh in the G3 Holy Bull in early February. Previously, his resume included wins in the Kentucky Downs Juvenile Mile and the G2 Bourbon Stakes at Keeneland.

Tiz the Bomb was listed in the program as being owned by Sherri McPeek's Magdelana Racing, although he has previously run under the colors of Phoenix Thoroughbreds. McPeek told media in recent weeks that he would lease the horse from Phoenix as he points toward the Epsom Derby. Phoenix is banned from racing in the United Kingdom, as its founder Amer Abdulaziz Salman has been implicated by a witness in a federal criminal case in New York as being a money launderer for an international cryptocurrency scam. Salman has not been charged with any crimes in this country as a result of that witness statement and has no restrictions on his owner's license stateside.

The 3-year-old colt is the son of Hit It A Bomb and Tiznow mare Tiz The Key. He was bred in Kentucky by Spendthrift Farm and was sold to McPeek for $330,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearling Showcase in 2020.

 

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Simplification Overcomes Trouble To Register Fountain Of Youth Triumph

Overcoming traffic problems in the run down the backstretch and avoiding a two-horse spill on the stretch turn, Tami Bobo's Simplification rallied wide for a 3 1/2-length win in Saturday's Grade 2, $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth Stakes at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

Ridden by Jose Ortiz for trainer Antonio Sano, the 3-year-old Florida-bred son of Not This Time covered 1 1/16 miles on a fast track in 1:44.04 and paid $7 as the second betting choice.

In Due Time (also by Not This Time), ridden by Paco Lopez, finished second, with O Captain a length back in third, three-quarters of a length ahead of favored Emmanual in fourth and Dean Delivers fifth in the field of 11.

The winner earned 50 qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby, with the second, third and fourth finishers getting 20-10-5 points each.

The race was marred by a spill involving two horses trained by Bill Mott. High Oak, ridden by Junior Alvarado, clipped heels when it appeared that Lopez shifted In Due Time to the outside on the turn, forcing A.P.'s Secret and jockey Tyler Gaffalione to alter course and into High Oak. Galt threw rider Joel Rosario when that horse tried to avoid the fallen High Oak.

Both horses did not suffer obvious injuries and walked back to their stables. Alvarado returned to the jockeys room complaining of ankle soreness, and will be evaluated at a nearby hospital. Rosario returned to the jockeys room on his own power but took off the final race.

Stewards conducted an inquiry but allowed the original results to stand.

Longshot Markhamian showed the way early, setting fractions of :23.77, :48.27 and 1:12.19 for the first six furlongs. Emmanuel, who came into the race with a perfect two-for-two record for Todd Pletcher, raced four wide into the first turn and was even wider down the backstretch and around the far turn. Simplification, who broke from the No. 2 post, was bottled up in traffic in the run down the backstretch, having to check while lacking room before shifting to the outside approaching the far turn.

Dean Delivers, another longshot who was chasing the early leader inherited the lead when Markhamian threw in the towel, but he was quickly surrounded by a host of rivals turning into the stretch, including Emmanuel and the eventual winner.

Simplification was to the outside of Emmanuel when the spill occurred and overtook that rival, opening up down the stretch after passing the mile marker in 1:44.04 to win going away.

The win was the third in six career starts for Simplification, who won a maiden race by an eye-popping  16 3/4 lengths last Oct. 23. After finishing third in an allowance race in November, Simplification  won the Mucho Macho Man at Gulfstream Park on Jan. 1, going wire to wire to win by four lengths.  He came off a second-place finish to White Abarrio in the G3 Holy Bull Stakes Feb. 5 after  getting off to a slow start.

This was the second time trainer Sano won the Fountain of Youth, scoring in the race with Gunnevera in 2017.

Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth post-race quotes

Winning trainer Antonio Sano (Simplification): “For me I liked the trip. I talked to [jockey] Jose [Ortiz] this morning and said you don't need to be in the front. The start was very important. If the horse has a good start and a safe trip, you won't have a problem. I wanted him to stay outside. Our horse in front with the speed horses won't have a chance. The horse responded to Jose. He said, 'Go,' and it was all good.”

“Five years ago here, we had [Post] No. 2 [with Gunnevera], and now we have No. 2 again. We repeat history.”

“I was worried for the jockey that went down. I know it was no problem for my horse because he was already outside. Jose when he came back asked me what happened. I said, 'I don't know.'”

“When my horse broke bad last time I thought, 'What a disaster.' I learned that the horse can run in the front or from behind. He doesn't have to be in the front. The plan today for the race was that he didn't need the front. If the start was good, I left it up to Jose to make the decision where to be.”

Compare to Gunnevera – “Both horses are nice horses, class horses, but Gunnevera wanted to go all the time. This horse is different. He can run in front or from behind, it doesn't matter.”

Winning rider Jose Ortiz (Simplification): “I knew he was going to be tough today. I worked him last week and Antonio had a lot of confidence in him. He broke well. He pulled me into the race. He put me there. At the three-eighths pole, I decided to go wide and follow Emmanuel and he was there for me.”

Trainer Kelly Breen (In Due Time, 2nd): “We're waiting to see just like everybody with the worst that was just outside of us. Paco was happy with everything that happened. Maybe he got stuck a little bit stuck inside on the rail, didn't have the perfectly clean, clean trip. But, to come running for second I think shows we're a contender. We're a legit. First time stakes racing against this caliber of competition, I think he's just getting better. I'm around him every day. He comes into the paddock and you see these horses for a race of this magnitude, he fits. To me, to my eyes, he looks like a man. Maybe at the turn of the year he still looked like a boy. I'm proud of him.”

Jockey Paco Lopez (In Due Time, 2nd): “That was the position I wanted. I got stuck a little bit at the three-eighths pole and I had to wait, wait and when I saw an opening I let him go. I know [Simplification] was the horse to beat. He gave me a kick and ran very good for the first time going two turns. I'm very happy. I think the horse is only getting better.”

Trainer Gustavo Delgado (O Captain, 3rd): “He ran super. Everybody's happy. The horse is very good. In this moment, we have no pressure. He finished very hard. Gulfstream Park is our home. [The Florida Derby] is possible.”

Jockey Javier Castellano (O Captain, 3rd): “I had a difficult post today, and I did the best I could to save all the ground on the first turn. I didn't want to rush the horse and be close. I rode with a lot of patience and it paid off. He hit the board and finished third. That's what we were looking for today. He made one run and I'm very satisfied the way he did it today.”

Trainer Todd Pletcher (Emmanuel, 4th): “He got squeezed [coming out of the gate] a little bit, dirt started hitting him in the face. And then he ran a long way, very wide all the way around. We were ahead of that [spill], so I don't think that played a factor in our result. He got a lot of experience. I don't think it was a bad race when you consider the break and the ground lost. He ran better than it looks on paper.”

Trainer Ken McPeek (Rattle N Roll): “I was hoping he would be fourth or better. He's a big horse that needs some running, and he hadn't run in five months. He needed the run. I'm glad he didn't get involved in the spill. [Jockey Brian Hernandez Jr.] said they fell just to his right and just missed him. He said he got tired the last eighth of a mile. I can go the Louisiana Derby, Florida Derby or Blue Grass. I can run in any of the three and I'd feel good about any of the three.”

Trainer Dale Romans (Howling Time): “He was running all right. He had to jump over the horses that fell. He was behind them when it happened. I don't know if he would have gotten a lot closer.”

Trainer Bill Mott (High Oak, Galt): “My horses walked off good. All I know is High Oak was in tight quarters.”

Note: Jockey Junior Alvarado was taken to first aid and was expected to go to Aventura Hospital to have his ankle further evaluated. Jockey Joel Rosario walked to the jockey's room and was expected to be evaluated for some back pain.

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Not This Time Colts 1-2 in Eventful Fountain of Youth

Tami Bobo's Simplification (Not This Time) avoided a nasty two-horse spill on the far turn and proved much the best in Saturday's GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S. at Gulfstream Park while leading home an exacta for his red-hot young sire.

The unlucky last out GIII Holy Bull S. runner-up, drawn on the inside in post two, raced in midpack rounding the clubhouse turn as rail-drawn longshot Markhamian (Social Inclusion) led the way. Under a snug hold by Jose Ortiz while racing in some traffic down the backstretch, the 5-2 choice caught the eye as he began to roll with a six-wide blitz, one path to the outside of the unbeaten 'TDN Rising Star' Emmanuel (More Than Ready), as five of them lined up nearing the quarter pole.

With Simplification traveling much the best on the outside as half of the field bunched up, the comebacking GII Saratoga Special S. winner High Oak (Gormley) dramatically clipped heels and fell, unseating jockey Junior Alvarado. His Bill Mott trained-stablemate Galt (Medaglia d'Oro) also got tripped up, leaping over the fallen runner and losing his rider Joel Rosario as well.

Both horses escaped injury and walked back to the barn. Rosario reported back soreness and Alvarado was taken to a nearly hospital to evaluate a sore ankle.

Simplification, meanwhile, swept by Emmanuel and the forwardly placed Dean Delivers (Cajun Breeze) as they straightened for home and wasn't for catching from there while hanging on his left lead down the stretch, scoring by 3 1/2 lengths. He earned 50 qualifying points for the GI Kentucky Derby.

In Due Time (Not This Time), a flashy optional claiming winner at Gulfstream Feb. 4, finished nicely for second. Huge longshot O Captain (Carpe Diem) rallied from last to complete the trifecta. Emmanuel, the second choice at 5-2, was fourth in his stakes debut after a very wide trip. Last term's GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity winner Rattle N Roll (Connect) never factored while sixth.

The Florida-bred Simplification, a 16 3/4-length maiden winner versus state-breds Oct. 23, captured his stakes debut two starts later in wire-to-wire fashion in the Mucho Macho Man S. Jan. 1. He ran well to finish second, beaten 4 1/2 lengths, showing a new dimension after an eventful start in the Holy Bull.

Trainer Antonio Sano also won the 2017 renewal of the Fountain of Youth with Gunnevera (Dialed In).

“Five years ago here, we had [post] No. 2 [with Gunnevera], and now we have No. 2 again, Sano said. “We repeat history.”

He continued, “For me, I liked the trip. I talked to [jockey] Jose [Ortiz] this morning and said you don't need to be in the front. The start was very important. If the horse has a good start and a safe trip, you won't have a problem. I wanted him to stay outside. Our horse in front with the speed horses won't have a chance. The horse responded to Jose. He said, 'Go,' and it was all good.”

Sano added, “When my horse broke bad last time I thought, 'What a disaster.' I learned that the horse can run in the front or from behind. He doesn't have to be in the front. The plan today for the race was that he didn't need the front. If the start was good, I left it up to Jose to make the decision where to be.”

Sano said that Simplification would likely be pointed toward the GI Curlin Florida Derby.

Pedigree Notes:

Few sires are hotter right now than Taylor Made's Not This Time, who has the fewest crops of any of the top 10 sires on the 2022 general sire list. In addition to his one-two finish by Simplification and In Due Time in the Fountain of Youth, his Epicenter is also on the Derby trail with a stellar win Feb 19 in the GII Risen Star S. Not This Time also has an additional graded winner this year with Jan. 29 GII Inside Information S. winner Just One Time. His 17 black-type winners include six graded winners and his sustained success recently prompted Chris McGrath to name Not This Time possibly Giant's Causeway's “principal American successor.” Both Simplification and Epicenter are out of Candy Ride (Arg) mares, a remarkable statistic given that covers one-third of Not This Time's graded winners and 12% of his black-type winners. Candy Ride's daughters have produced 30 stakes winners to date.

Simplification's history was recently detailed, but his immediate family has some wildly familiar names. His granddam is a full-sister to 2004-05 champion Ashado (Saint Ballado), as well as additional GISW Sunriver. Hall of Famer Ashado was a $9-million purchase by John Ferguson for Godolphin at the 2005 Keeneland November sale. Simplification's dam has a 2-year-old filly by Mendelssohn (a $190,000 RNA as a Fasig-Tipton New York yearling) and a yearling filly by Audible (a $47,000 RNA at the recent OBS Winter sale). Simply Confection delivered a Union Rags filly the day before the Fountain of Youth.

Saturday, Gulfstream Park
FASIG-TIPTON FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH S.-GII, $400,000, Gulfstream, 3-5, 3yo, 1 1/16m, 1:44.04, ft.
1–SIMPLIFICATION, 120, c, 3, by Not This Time
       1st Dam: Simply Confection (SP, $124,688), by
                       Candy Ride (Arg)
       2nd Dam: Ballado's Halo, by Saint Ballado
       3rd Dam: Goulash, by Mari's Book
   1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($50,000 RNA Wlg '19 KEENOV).
O-Tami Bobo; B-France & Irwin J. Weiner (FL); T-Antonio Sano;
J-Jose L. Ortiz. $238,080. Lifetime Record: 6-3-1-1, $411,350.
Click for eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating:
   A++.
2–In Due Time, 120, c, 3, Not This Time–Sweet Sweet Annie, by
Curlin. 1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. ($9,500
Wlg '19 KEENOV; $35,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP; $95,000 2yo '21
OBSAPR). O-Edge Racing, Medallion Racing & Parkland
Thoroughbreds; B-Gary & Mary West Stables Inc. (KY); T-Kelly
Breen. $76,800.
3–O Captain, 118, c, 3, Carpe Diem–Mama Nadine, by A.P. Indy.
. ($17,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-OGMA
Investments, LLC and Towell, Jr., Jack Hardin; B-WinStar Farm,
LLC (KY); T-Gustavo Delgado. $38,400.
Margins: 3HF, 1, 3/4. Odds: 2.50, 6.20, 87.70.
Also Ran: Emmanuel, Dean Delivers, Rattle N Roll, A. P.'s Secret, Markhamian, Howling Time, High Oak, Galt. Scratched: Giant Game, Mo Donegal.Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Forbidden Kingdom In A League Of His Own In San Felipe

It was all too easy for Forbidden Kingdom to earn 50 points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby; the 3-year-old son of champion American Pharoah simply ran his rivals off their feet in Saturday's Grade 2 San Felipe Stakes at Santa Anita Park.

Owned by MyRacehorse and Spendthrift Farm, Forbidden Kingdom was in front all the way around the track in Arcadia, Calif., crossing the wire first by over five lengths in his first start around two turns. Ridden by Juan Hernandez for Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella, Forbidden Kingdom covered 1 1/16 miles over the fast dirt in 1:43.98.

Sent to post at even-money odds off his victory in the seven-furlong San Vicente (G2), Forbidden Kingdom again defeated Bob Baffert trainee Doppelganger, who was relegated to second. Happy Jack got up for third, while Beautiful Art ran fourth.

(Doppelganger is not eligible to earn the 20 Derby points allotted to his finishing position, due to Churchill Downs' ban of his trainer.)

Beautiful Art reared in the gate and briefly unseated jockey Mike Smith, then hopped at the start of the San Felipe. Meanwhile, Forbidden Kingdom broke very well from his near-outside post, and immediately rushed up to the lead under Hernandez. Around the clubhouse turn, Forbidden Kingdom led Armagnac by two lengths while covering the first quarter mile in :22.66. He extended his lead to as many as 10 lengths down the backstretch, ticking off fractions of :45.90 and 1:10.96 with his ears pricked.

Doppelganger, the second choice, was fifth early on with at least 10 lengths to make up on the runaway leader. Jockey Flavien Prat was able to get Doppelganger to second around the far turn, but Forbidden Kingdom turned for home with a six-length advantage.

Despite going a bit wide around the turn, Forbidden Kingdom continued to race on like a professional through the stretch. With minimal encouragement from Hernandez, Forbidden Kingdom cruised under the wire a winner by at least five lengths. Though Doppelganger dug in gamely, he was not able to make up ground on the leader and had to settle for second. Happy Jack, third in the early going, hung around to finish third, while Beautiful Art overcame his bad start to finish fourth.

Bred in Kentucky by Springhouse Farm, Forbidden Kingdom is out of the Grade 3-winning Five Star Day mare Just Louise. A $300,000 yearling purchase at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky sale, the colt won his debut over 5 1/2 furlongs on the dirt at Del Mar. Returning in a five-furlong turf stakes on the grass, Forbidden Kingdom ran third.

The colt was defeated by the highly-regarded Messier over seven furlongs on dirt in the G3 Bob Hope Stakes, but rebounded 2 1/2 months later to win the G2 San Vicente over the same distance. The San Felipe win improves his overall record to three wins from five starts, for earnings of over $400,000.

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