Ward Sends Daylight Maiden Winner Happy Soul To Astoria

Juvenile stakes action in New York this year commences on Thursday when a field of six freshman fillies assemble for the 109th running of the $150,000 Astoria going 5 ½ furlongs over the main track at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

The Astoria, named after a town in Queens, is one of three stakes events carded for Belmont Stakes Racing Festival from June 3-5. Joining the Astoria on Thursday's card will be the Grade 3, $200,000 Wonder Again for sophomore fillies going nine furlongs over the inner turf and the Grade 3, $200,000 Intercontinental for fillies and mares 4-years-old and upward going seven furlongs over the Widener turf.

Trainer Wesley Ward, a two-time Astoria winner, will send out Happy Soul who impressed in her second career start with a decisive 11 ¾-length victory travelling five furlongs on May 13 at Belmont Park, registering an 80 Beyer Speed Figure.

Owned by Gayla Rankin, the daughter of medication-free second crop-sire Runhappy was second on debut to stablemate Nakatomi, who targets the Astoria's counterpart race – the $150,000 Tremont on Friday. The bay filly was never in doubt last out as she extended her advantage throughout the journey.

“She's a nice filly and ran a good race. It looks like she can still grow into a nice frame,” Ward said. “She's doing great. She won so easily the other day that we figured we would give this a shot. She is a good-training filly.”

Bred in Kentucky by Harris Training Center, Happy Soul is out of the Stephen Got Even mare Cowgirl Lucky. She was bought for $50,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, where she was consigned by James M. Herbener, Jr.

Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez was in the irons in both starts and will return in pursuit of his fifth Astoria score from post 4.

Terry Hutto's American Bound gave freshman sire American Freedom his first winner and could give the 2016 Runhappy Travers runner-up his first stakes winner as well when breaking from post 6 for trainer Joe Sharp.

American Bound was a 1 ½-length winner over the Keeneland main track on debut before finishing fifth over a sloppy and sealed track in the Kentucky Juvenile on April 28 at Churchill Downs.

American Bound was a frugal $15,000 acquisition from this year's OBS Winter Sale, where she was consigned by Sharon Biamonte.

Jockey Luis Saez will return to the irons.

Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse will saddle Gary Barber's Constitution Gal in her first start over the main track.

The gray or roan daughter of third-crop sire Constitution was a distant third to Royal Ascot bound Twilight Gleaming in her debut, which took pace over the Widener turf course at Belmont Park.

Jockey Kendrick Carmouche will guide Constitution Gal from post 3.

Constitution Gal was bought from Parrish Farms consignment barn for $150,000 at this year's OBS March Sale. She is the first offspring out of the unraced Spring At Last mare Spring Island.

Mainstay, a half-sister to 2-year-old Champion Filly Vequist, will exit post 2 under Frankie Pennington in her career debut. Trained by Butch Reid, Jr., Mainstay is by Astern and out of the Mineshaft mare Vero Amore.

Rounding out the field are Midsummer Nights [post 5, Manny Franco], and She's So Shiny [post 1, Mychel Sanchez].

The Astoria is carded as Race 7 on Thursday's nine-race program at Belmont Park. First post is 3:05 p.m.

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Kirkpatrick & Co Presents In Their Care: Behind Wesley Ward Is A Loyal, Larger-Than-Life Crew Of Talent

Wesley Ward is on a roll.

With 20 victories, including four stakes races, Ward recently secured his seventh training title at Keeneland Race Course, tying him with Henry Forrest for third all-time.

Ward, who owns a mind-blowing 11 victories at Royal Ascot after becoming the first American to win there in 2009, is set to take another loaded lineup overseas from June 15-19.

According to Equibase, Ward was winning at a torrid 33 percent clip through May 22, with 65 victories from 197 starters. His horses had hit the board 60 percent of the time. He won at a 26 percent rate (125 of 477) last year and recorded his 2,000th career victory on May 6 with Ken Ramsey's Gold for Kitten at Churchill Downs.

Ward would be the first to credit such extraordinary success to his team approach. In an industry in which backstretch help comes and goes with maddening frequency, exercise rider Mike Clark and grooms Jose Reveles and Manuel Frausto are constants he counts on.

Clark has been part of the operation since Ward began training on his own in 1991. He shows the way for all of the riders during training hours. Reveles and Frausto are cousins who hail from Mexico and came to the United States in search of a better life.  They have been in place for more than three decades. They set the tone for other grooms in their understanding of the attention to detail necessary for success.

Ward said of the constant presence of the three veterans: “It means everything. We're all here and we're all working as a team.”

Ward currently oversees approximately 100 horses in addition to a breeding farm in Lexington.

“It seems like a lot, but it really isn't because every morning of every day everybody has a job to do that they've done for years,” the trainer said, adding, “If it wasn't for everybody doing their jobs, this would not work. One spoke out of the wheel and the tire would go flat.”

It helps that Ward is multilingual, as he says, speaking Spanish and “Hillbilly” fluently. The latter describes the colorful, ungrammatical language used by Clark, a former rodeo rider and jockey who talks as fast as he lives. The Arizona native has a wild side that never quits.

“As talented as he is on top of a horse,” Ward said, “when his boots are on the ground, he's that big of a nightmare.”

When it comes to smoking cigarettes, drinking and carousing, apparently Clark has few equals. He readily admits to numerous excesses, especially in his youth. He is forever grateful to Ward for his willingness to forgive countless transgressions.

Mike Clark, photo courtesy Wesley Ward

“No matter what happened, no matter what we did, we stuck together,” Clark said. “He's a loyal man.”

Clark's uncommon horsemanship made it easier to look past his sins.

“People say I've got a gift,” he said. “Nobody taught me. I taught myself.”

Clark is a major factor in Ward's ability to develop precocious 2-year-olds that literally get a jump on the competition thanks to their sharpness breaking from the starting gate.

Clark credits his success with all kinds of horses to the way he approaches them: with love, without fear.

“As long as you are nice to them and not mean to them, they don't want to hurt you,” he said.

There seemingly is not a horse that Clark cannot handle. Ward thought back almost two decades ago to a recalcitrant filly that was under Todd Pletcher's care at Palm Beach Downs in South Florida. The filly would reach the track and begin to spin around and carry on, steadfastly refusing to train.

After watching this repeatedly play out, Ward, who had yet to establish himself, approached the accomplished Pletcher.

“I have a guy who can get on this filly, no problem,” Ward told him.

A couple of weeks later, the owner was coming to see his filly train. Pletcher, desperate for an answer, took up Ward's offer. Ward, in turn, made an unusual request. He did not want Clark to be paid for the additional work.

“If he gets a bunch of money, he's going to make a left turn on me,” Ward explained.

That did not keep Clark from taking a left turn the night before his date with Pletcher's mercurial filly.

“He had gone out with this young blacksmith I had,” Ward recalled. “They were shooting pool, drinking whiskey and carrying on.”

And it showed. Clark was badly hung over as he approached the filly without any trepidation. A cigarette dangled from his lip. He was sipping a Heineken in an effort to ease his severe hangover. And yet, when he hopped aboard, the enigmatic filly followed his cues and trained as never before.

Pletcher was appreciative, but he did not know what to make of it all.

“If I hadn't seen it with my own eyes,” he told Ward, “I wouldn't have believed it.”

For all that he lacks in appearance, the toothless Clark has built an international reputation and is a popular figure wherever he ventures. Elite jockeys Frankie Dettori and Joel Rosario, who have benefitted from the way he prepares Ward's finest stock, each offered to pay for his badly-needed dental work in what continues to be running joke. Clark, while acknowledging how frequently he strayed from the straight and narrow, is proud of what he has helped to build. He recalled the early days with Ward, when they tried to make something of horses obtained for anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000.

He appreciates how far they have come.

“When we first started, we were broke. We had nothing. We kept going and kept going,” he said. “Now, we're thankful we've got good owners and we're doing pretty good.”

Current success stemmed from the ability of Clark, Reveles and Frausto to make as much as possible out of little.

“Some guys just have that touch and that feel. It's hard to teach. It just has to be bred into them or start at a young age,” Ward said. “It would be like a painter. They take that paint brush and away they go. Picasso.”

Tom Pedulla wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.

If you wish to suggest a backstretch worker as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info@paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the employee's background.

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Outadore Installed As Morning LIne Favorite For Friday’s Penn Mile

Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course announced Monday that a field of seven horses has been entered for the eighth running of the $300,000 Penn Mile (G2) for 3-year-olds going one mile on the turf to be run on Friday, May 28.

Post time for the 11-race card is 6 P.M. EST with the Penn Mile set as the fourth race scheduled for approximately 7:45 P.M. as the final leg of an “All Stakes – All Turf Pick 4.” The Pick 4 will kick off with two $100,000 stakes for Pennsylvania-breds followed by the $100,000 Penn Oaks for 3-year-old fillies going one mile on the turf.

Also featured on the evening card is a mandatory payout of the Hollywood High 5 carryover in race 7 which currently stands at over $216,000 as of Friday, May 21

Breeze Easy, LLC's Outadore, trained by Wesley Ward, was installed as the 8-5 morning line favorite for the Penn Mile. A winner in his last race in the Animal Kingdom Stakes at Turfway Park on the synthetic surface, Outadore will switch back to the turf for Friday's featured race. Twice a winner on the turf as a two-year-old, Outadore also finished third in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf (G1) at Keeneland last fall. Irad Ortiz, Jr., Eclipse Award winner as the top rider in North America for three consecutive years and winner of the 2017 Penn Mile aboard Frostmourne, is scheduled to ride.

Hall of Famer conditioner Bill Mott will saddle 9-5 morning line second choice Annex for owners LNJ Foxwoods and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners. A winner of his first three lifetime starts including the Cutlers Bay and Palm Beach stakes at Gulfstream Park earlier this year, Annex finished eighth, beaten only five and half lengths, as the favorite in the Grade 2 American Turf run at Churchill Downs on the Kentucky Derby day race card. Jockey Junior Alvarado has the mount.

The Mike Maker trained Chess's Dream, owned by Michael Dubb, Steven Bouchey, Bethlehem Stables LLC and Chester A. Bishop, also last raced in the American Turf checking in seventh. Chess's Dream was victorious in the Kitten's Joy (G3) at Gulfstream Park in January and will be ridden by jockey Kendrick Carmouche on Friday.

Hall of Famer and recent Kentucky Derby winning jockey John Velazquez will be aboard Eric Fein's Original. Trained by John Terranova II, Original placed third in his last two starts – the Woodhaven Stakes at Aqueduct and the aforementioned Kitten's Joy won by Chess's Dream.

Rounding out the field is Godolphin, LLC's Gershwin, trained by Michael Stidham and ridden by Joe Bravo, J Park Racing, LLC and Delia Nash's Sibelius, trained by Jeremiah O'Dwyer and ridden by Sheldon Russell, and Kernan E Morris, Jr. and Jagger Inc.'s The King Cheek, trained by Jamie Ness and ridden by Jaime Rodriguez.

After only seven previous editions the Grade 2 Penn Mile has quickly become one of the top turf events of the year for the 3-year-old division earning Grade 3 status after just three runnings and moving up to Grade 2 status after just four renewals. In its short history, prior Penn Mile winners include Breeders' Cup champion Bobby's Kitten as well as Grade 1 winners Catch a Glimpse and Force the Pass in its short history.

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Trainer Wesley Ward ‘Getting Excited’ About Royal Ascot Contingent

Richard Ravin's Maven, a Group 3 winner in France in 2019 who captured his 2021 debut in April at Keeneland, joined a group of 2-year-olds who turned in half-mile works on the firm Keeneland turf course Friday for trainer Wesley Ward in preparation for possible trips to England to compete at Royal Ascot in June. Since 2009, when he became the first American trainer to win a race at Royal Ascot, Ward has 11 victories at the prestigious meet.

The Royal Ascot meet will be held June 15-19.

“We had some really nice works,” Ward said about today's performances. “(The Keeneland turf course) is a true grass course. It's similar to the courses in England.”

Keeneland clockers caught Maven, working in company with Madison (G1) winner Kimari, in :47.80. A 4-year-old gelding by American Pharoah, Maven is intended for the 5-furlong King's Stand (G1) on June 15 at Royal Ascot, while Kimari is being pointed to Saratoga for her next start in the July 28 Honorable Miss (G2).

Ward's juvenile turf workers all won their career debuts in April:

· Marc Detampel's Nakatomi (June 17 Norfolk-G2) was clocked in :50.40 in company with Hat Creek Racing and Cheyenne Stable's Tea Olive (:52)

· Two horses owned by Stonestreet Stable worked in company – Ruthin (GB) (June 16 Queen Mary-G2) in :48.60 and Napa Spirit (IRE) (Norfolk) in :48.80.

· Hat Creek Racing and Cheyenne Stable's Golden Bell (June 18 Albany-G3) was timed in :48.20 in company with her faster workmate, Gregory Kaufman's Kaufymaker (:47.80).

Ward said Kaufymaker earned consideration with today's work to compete at Royal Ascot.

Set to return to Royal Ascot for Ward is Stonestreet's 3-year-old filly Campanelle (IRE), who last year captured the Queen Mary before taking the Darley Prix Morny (G1) at Deauville in France. Campanelle is based at Keeneland but has been working Sundays on the turf course at Churchill Downs in a schedule based on the availability of the Keeneland course.

Ward has Campanelle scheduled to make her 2021 debut in the June 18 Commonwealth Cup (G1) at 6 furlongs against males. With a win at Royal Ascot two years in a row, Campanelle would equal the feat of Stonestreet's Lady Aurelia, who Ward trained to win the 2016 Queen Mary and 2017 King's Stand.

The trainer's other possible 2-year-old starters at Royal Ascot this year include Peter Leidel's Overbore (June 15 Coventry-G2); Andrew Farm, For the People Racing Stable and Windmill Manor Farm's Lucci (Norfolk) and Stonestreet's Twilight Gleaming (IRE) (June 16 Windsor Castle-L).

Ward said the horses would depart June 1 on a flight from Indianapolis and be based at the English National Stud. He plans to fly to England following Bound for Nowhere's start in the Jackpot Jaipur (G1) on June 5 at Belmont Park and oversee the final works by his contingent before their Royal Ascot races.

“I'm getting excited,” he said.

Another Royal Ascot hopeful stabled at Keeneland is DARRS Inc.'s Extravagant Kid, who won the $1 million Al Quoz Sprint (G1) Sponsored by Azizi Developments during the March 27 Dubai World Cup card. Trained by Brendan Walsh, Extravagant Kid is being considered for two races at the meet: the 5-furlong King's Stand (G1) on June 15 and the 6-furlong Diamond Jubilee (G1) on June 19.

Extravagant Kid has recorded half-mile breezes at Keeneland on dirt on May 4 (:50.20) and May 13 (:48.20). Walsh said he is scheduled to work again Saturday at 7:30 a.m.

“Flying out on the first or second (of June),” Walsh said via text about travel plans for Extravagant Kid. “I'm not sure if I'm going yet. Depends on the quarantine restrictions.”

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