Brightwork Heads Breeders’ Cup Work Tab

With the 40th Breeders' Cup World Championships less than two weeks away, a number of hopefuls worked Saturday morning at Keeneland as they make their final preparations before shipping to Santa Anita.

Trainer John Ortiz took GISW Brightwork (Outwork) out for a spin on Saturday with William Simon, owner of WSS Racing, on hand as the bay filly points towards the GI NetJets Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Nov. 3.

Working with 4 G Racing's GSP Crown Imperial (Classic Empire), a candidate for the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf also on Nov. 3, Brightwork finished in front of her stablemate while completing five furlongs in 1:00.80 and galloping out six furlongs in 1:14. Crown Imperial received a time of 1:02.20 for five furlongs.

“She did it very easy,” Ortiz said of Brightwork, who sustained her first defeat in the Oct. 6 GI Darley Alcibiades S. run at 1 1/16 miles after opening her career with four victories. “She's a filly that likes to take direction and she understood that today I wanted to give her confidence to go two turns.”

Ortiz plans to breeze Brightwork in Lexington Saturday, Oct. 28 with a scheduled Oct. 30 departure to Southern California. She and Crown Imperial would mark the first starters for Ortiz at Santa Anita.

“Never saddled one on my own,” Ortiz said. “I was out there before as an assistant to Kellyn Gorder.”

 

Others Prep for Breeders' Cup at Keeneland

Trainer Cherie DeVaux worked her three Breeders' Cup hopefuls on the main track Saturday morning.

First was John Gunther's GI Breeders' Cup Big Ass Fans Dirt Mile candidate GSP Stage Raider (Pioneerof the Nile) who worked five furlongs in 1:01. Following the morning's track renovation session, Lael Stable's GISW She Feels Pretty (Karakontie {Jpn}) worked a half-mile in :48.40 for the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf and Victory Racing Partners' GSW More Than Looks (More Than Ready) worked a half-mile in :48.60 for the GI Breeders' Cup FanDuel Mile on turf.

In Italian | Sarah Andrew

Other Breeders' Cup possible candidates working on the dirt were GI Juddmonte Spinster S. runner-up GISP Le Da Vida (Chi) (Gemologist) (half-mile in :47.60, 1/79) for trainer Ignacio Correas IV in preparation for the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff and Hidden Class (Catalina Cruiser) (half-mile in :49.40) for Joe Sharp in advance of a possible run in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf or GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint.

Working over the Keeneland turf that was rated as 'good' with designs on the Breeders' Cup were GI Ricoh Woodbine Mile winner and runner-up in the GI Coolmore Turf Mile S. Master of The Seas (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) (half-mile in :52.20; click here for video), and GI First Lady S. runner-up and MGISW In Italian (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) (half-mile in :51.80; click here for video).

 

Arzak In Good Order Says Trombetta

Sonata Stable's Arzak (Not This Time), winner of the GII Woodford S. Oct. 7, turned in a half-mile breeze in :51.20 over the Haggin Course to the delight of trainer Mike Trombetta. (Click here for video)

“With all the rain [Friday], I was surprised we got on the grass [Saturday],” said Trombetta, who arrived at Keeneland Friday from his main base in Maryland. “It looked like he got over it good. There was a little cut in the ground from the rain.”

Luis Saez was aboard for the work, one of two scheduled at Keeneland before Arzak heads to California on Oct. 30 for an expected start in the Nov. 4 GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint. Trombetta confirmed that Saez, who rode Arzak to victory against optional claimers Aug. 23 at Saratoga the one time he was aboard the 5-year-old, would have the Breeders' Cup mount.

Practical Move Leads BC Preps at Santa Anita

   Topping Saturday's worktab at Santa Anita, GI Santa Anita Derby winner Practical Move (Practical Joke) visited the track at 6:45 a.m., covering four furlongs in :48.80. Trainer Tim Yakteen confirmed the colt will target the GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile.

“He got some outside company and it all went well,” Yakteen said. “I was just looking to see that his energy level was good, make sure all systems are a go. That's what we saw.”

In his latest start, the bay returned from a layoff to take a one-mile allowance at Santa Anita Oct. 6.

Also working towards expected starts in the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint were Anarchist (Distorted Humor) (five furlongs, :59.40) on the main track and The Chosen Vron (Vronsky) (five furlongs, 1:01.60) on the training track.

Also working on the main track for trainer Steve Asmussen was Gunite (Gun Runner) (five furlongs, 1:00.20), who is possible for either the Sprint or the Dirt Mile.

Anarchist worked with Vazquez in the irons. The 4-year-old trained by Doug O'Neill most recently won the GII Pat O'Brien S. going seven furlongs at Del Mar Aug. 26.

“He went really good. This is a happy horse,” Vazquez said.  Added Leandro Mora, O'Neill's assistant, “He's stepping things up. He looks more focused and fresher, which was the idea giving him more time between races.”

Drilling a half-mile on the training track for the GI Breeders' Cup Mile were Du Jour (Temple City) and Exaulted (Twirling Candy), the one-two finishers in the Sept. 2 GII Del Mar Mile. Du Jour worked in :48.60 while Exaulted, winner of the GI Shoemaker Mile last spring, went in :47.40.

Also returning to the tab for Bob Baffert were Muth (Good Magic) and Wine Me Up (Vino Rosso), the one-two finishers in the GI American Pharoah S. Oct. 7. Muth went five furlongs in :59.40 seconds and Wine Me Up was timed in :59.20 seconds for the same distance. Both are pointed to the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Nov. 3.

The deadline to pre-enter for the Breeders' Cup is Monday, Oct. 23 at 3 p.m. ET. Pre-entries will be announced Oct. 25 at noon ET.

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Ortiz Barn Shines Bright with Undefeated Filly

John Ortiz draws the analogy of playing cards to what it feels like going into a stakes race at Saratoga. Everyone keeps their hand close and you never can tell who might be bluffing.

But the trainer of Brightwork (Outwork) may have let his poker face slip when he spoke with Irad Ortiz Jr. in the paddock ahead of the GIII Adirondack S. on Sunday.

“I walked in there confident and with a smile,” Ortiz shared. “Irad had worked her and I said, 'You know what you've got and I know what I've got, so just ride her like a big horse.'”

Despite bobbling at the break, Brightwork delivered just as her up-and-coming trainer had hoped, achieving a perfect 3-for-3 record as she swung four wide in the stretch and drew away to win by five lengths sporting the silks of Bill and Tammy Simon's WSS Racing. The victory gave Ortiz his first stakes win in Saratoga.

“I'm very proud that we got to win here,” he reflected. “I feel like I belong. I'm not a rookie trainer anymore. We've all got something to learn on the racetrack every day, but I feel like we know what we're doing. We're here to compete. All the hard work through my entire life, all the good choices and all the bad choices I've made in my life, have paid off.”

Ortiz now has two wins and a stakes placing on his record during his first Saratoga meet this year, but it was only a few years ago that the young trainer was questioning his decision to launch his own stable.

After taking out his trainer's license in 2016, his numbers had dropped from seven horses to four by the end of the first year and he wondered if his dream was going to work out. But then, the Midwest-based conditioner got a call from two key clients–former Walmart CEO Bill Simon and Hootie Moore of Hootie's Racing. Those two stables joined in with Ortiz's longtime client 4G Racing and the wins slowly started to collect.

Jared Hughes, Bill Simon, John Ortiz and the rest of the Brightwork crew | Sarah Andrew

“We had a lot of claimers and we went through a lot of emotions in those first years,” said Ortiz. “But people noticed that it didn't matter what kind of horse we had, we just gave it our all. [Our owners] know how much we care about these animals day in and day out. From me and all through my grooms, we talk about how special we treat our horses.”

Another key to Ortiz's early success was his connection with bloodstock agent Jared Hughes. Hughes picked up Barber Road (Race Day) for $15,000 as a weanling and the colt went on to take WSS Racing to their first Kentucky Derby last year. The agent has since found another standout in Brightwork.

Hughes purchased Brightwork, a daughter of the unraced Malibu Moon mare Clarendon Fancy, for $95,000 at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton November Sale. He believed that what the filly may have lacked in pedigree was made up for by a standout physical.

“That year we bought five babies and she was the first one we bought,” recalled Hughes. “I try to focus on horses that really stick out to me. She was a beautiful foal–a big, frame-y filly and she really stood out above her peers. That's what stood out to me was how big and strong she was.”

The WSS Racing model involves purchasing around half a dozen foals at the weanlings sales each fall and then refining the group the following year–adding in a few yearling purchases and re-selling one or two to pay for the new additions. Hughes explained that the system works to their advantage as it allows him to focus on finding the horses he likes physically instead of hunting down the most commercial prospects.

“It allows for a lot of flexibility and I think if we buy them early, we aren't paying a premium,” he said. “We can get to know them and decide which ones we want to sell.”

After spending time at Fallbrook Farm, Brightwork was sent to Ortiz's father Carlos Ortiz, a former jockey who now runs Ortiz Training Stables in Ocala. Ortiz said that after his father had spent just a few days with the filly, he told his son that she was one to watch out for.

Daniel Ortiz and Brightwork | Sarah Andrew

Brightwork arrived at Ortiz's Keeneland barn in the springtime and, while Ortiz said he normally doesn't send out many 2-year-olds in April, he soon knew she would be an exception. Brightwork made her debut a winning one on April 26 after dueling with Stonestreet-owned Barbtourage (Into Mischief ) in the stretch. The third-place finisher was future G2 Queen Mary S. winner Crimson Advocate (Nyquist).

“She wasn't there 100% fitness-wise, but she was 100% mentally there,” Ortiz explained. “That's why we decided to give it a shot. Sometimes with baby races, I think if they have a little bit of an idea of what they're out there to do, they get the job done. We were amazed that she showed a lot of heart and toughness because she got bumped and then was able to come back and pass through the rail. Not a lot of 2-year-olds run on like that once they get passed.”

Following the victory, Ortiz and his team sketched out a plan to get to the Breeders' Cup. After additional scores in the Debutante S. and the Adirondack, they are now on to the GI Spinaway.

“After her debut, I told Jared that he better get ready to pick out a purple tie,” Ortiz said with a grin. “That was back at Keeneland and I'm still looking for that tie.”

“If anyone knows me, I don't like to wear ties,” added Hughes. “I told Johnny if he gets her to the Breeders' Cup, I will go buy the tie.”

Ortiz is a native of Columbia, but he moved to New York as a child and grew up tagging along with his father at the Bill Mott barn. He started his career as a hot walker for Mott and would later become a traveling assistant for the Hall of Fame trainer before working for Graham Motion and Barclay Tagg. He met Hughes in Kentucky while working for Kellyn Gorder and opened his stable shortly after.

“When he first came to Kentucky, he was just this kid from New York,” recalled Hughes. “He was different from me, but I had a lot to learn from him. He's a great rider and a great horseman. Johnny just has the “it” factor. He speaks horse. He understands them and he listens. This is his first year in New York and it's a big deal for him to be here. We planned to bring a small group up here to try it, but it really came down to us needing Brightwork to be who she is to get to go. When she won at Ellis, it made it easy.”

The Ortiz barn has been a Saratoga success outside of Brightwork's victory. Fellow WSS Racing colorbearers Unsung Melody (Maclean's Music) ran third in the Wilton S. and Urgent Fury (Creative Cause) broke his maiden on July 28.

During the week Ortiz returns to visit his strings in Kentucky, but he relies on the help of his 24-year-old brother Daniel to hold down the fort in Saratoga.

“We discussed this a long time ago,” explained Ortiz. “I told my brother that I would need him to be able to step up and represent the Ortiz family, not just the barn. We're all working on this together. I don't have my name on the logo. It's just two stripes. He has risen to the challenge and made me very proud. He's been doing a great job not just representing me, but the horses themselves. They look incredible and he has taken a lot of pride in the work he's putting in.”

Brightwork wins by five in the Adirondack | Sarah Andrew

Family is an important aspect of the Ortiz stable. From the horses to the clients to the grooms, Ortiz considers them all a member of his team.

“I have learned a lot from Mr. Bill [Simon],” he said. “He's a really good role model and a good mentor. To be able to win for these types of connections is incredible. Jared has been like an older brother to me and the fact that my dad is the one that always gets my babies started, we all have a really good connection.”

“It is definitely like a family,” Hughes added. “Bill and Tammy treat us like family. They allow us to make decisions. They allow us to make mistakes. This game has a lot of highs and lows, so you really need to enjoy who you're doing it with. We just enjoy being around each other and it means so much because we're doing it together.”

Enjoying the talents of a filly like Brightwork, Ortiz and Hughes agreed, makes their experience together all the more special.

“It means so much because we're doing it together,” Hughes explained. “To have a filly like this with unlimited potential, it means the world. I gave Johnny a big hug in the winner's circle and he said, 'I love you, bro' and that's what I'll remember.”

“This filly brings us all together,” Ortiz said. “Everybody takes pride in what we do for her, with her and because of her. She's just special.”

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Hollis Sets Track Record In Upset Win At Oaklawn

It took a track record to topple a track record holder.

Hollis lowered the 5 ½-furlong mark in Friday's eighth race at Oaklawn Racing Casino Resort in Hot Springs, Ark., rolling to a 4 ½-length victory under perennial local riding champion Ricardo Santana Jr. Racing over a fast track, Hollis stopped the clock in 1:02.17 to eclipse the previous record of 1:02.60 – a time converted from fifths of a second – set by Sis Pleasure Fager in a Feb. 15, 1984, allowance race for fillies and mares.

Friday's race, a conditioned allowance for 3-year-olds and up, marked the return of 1-5 favorite Nashville, who finished second in his first start in almost a year after setting the six-furlong track record on the Breeders' Cup undercard at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky., in November 2020.

Nashville was no match for Hollis ($11.20), who tracked the front-runner from the start on the outside before seizing control in the upper stretch. Hollis, under 120 pounds, broke the record with a strong southerly breeze pushing temperatures into the mid-70s, unseasonably warm for early December. He received a preliminary Beyer Speed Figure of 109, which equals the fourth-highest figure in the country this year in races up to a mile on the main track, according to Daily Racing Form.

“Hollis is a very special horse in our barn,” John Ortiz, the 6-year-old gelding's trainer, said Friday night. “He's got a personality like no other. We call him, 'The Scrapper.' We call him, 'The Boxer.' He wants to be in a fight. He'll take the fight to his competition. That's what my instructions were to Ricardo. When he's comfortable and you see Nashville take a breather, that's when you go up and join him. I know Ricardo was pumped. He said to me, 'Don't worry Johnny, we still had a lot left in the tank.' Good news.”

Santana, an eight-time Oaklawn riding champion, had ridden Nashville in his previous three starts, including the $125,000 Perryville Stakes for 3-year-olds when he set Keeneland's six-furlong track record (1:07.89) after sailing through a :21.54 opening quarter and :43.87 half-mile. Friday's splits were :21.81, :44.99, and :56.13 for 5 furlongs.

“It was pretty much what I thought would happen – seeing Nashville up in the front and us stalking him from the outside,” Ortiz said. “Just where we were, the fractions were perfect for Hollis. Sitting just off that pace was the best thing. To be honest with you, when you run Hollis, you're always in for an exciting race. You see in his record, he's dead-heated, he's won by a nose, he's lost by a nose and he's missing a nostril. It's always fun to win these races because he's really never disappointed us. We knew we were sending a horse that was 300 percent ready.”

Ortiz trains Hollis for William Simon (WSS Racing) and Brent and Sharilyn Gasaway (4 G Racing). On behalf of the Arkansas owners, Ortiz claimed the son of 2007 Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense for $40,000 May 25, 2020, at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Hollis is a half-brother to Grade 1-raced Lady Lilly, a daughter of 2016 Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist who finished fifth in the $200,000 Martha Washington Stakes for 3-year-old fillies last season at Oaklawn.

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Hollis has proven to be a home-run claim, bankrolling $334,553 in 15 starts for his new connections and winning stakes races on dirt and turf. He was gelded shortly after being claimed. Hollis had previously sold for $200,000 and $120,000 at public auction.

“The pedigree was part of it,” Ortiz said of the claim. “I was the only one in on the horse. He was a pretty decent sprinter and we like sprinters. He was still intact and once we took the weight off, he really leaned out, literally, and became a much more focused horse to do what he likes to do, which is run really fast.”

Ortiz said Hollis will be considered for upcoming stakes races at Oaklawn, along with Mucho, another hard-knocking older stakes-winning sprinter he trains for Simon and the Gasaways (husband and wife). Owing to a Christmas gathering with family, Ortiz said he watched Friday's race from his Lexington, Ky., home.

Hollis' ninth victory in 22 career starts bumped his earnings to $420,333. He was also an allowance winner at 5 ½ furlongs last April at Oaklawn, covering the distance in 1:03.65 over a fast track.

Nashville was making his first start since being beaten for the first time in the $300,000 G1 Malibu Stakes for 3-year-olds Dec. 26, 2020, at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif., for Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen and co-owners WinStar Farm and China Horse Club.

Nashville had a small ankle chip removed following the Malibu and suffered a minor physical setback last summer, said Elliott Walden, who is WinStar's president/CEO and racing manager. Nashville was making his fifth career start Friday. He won his first three starts by a combined 24 ¾ front-running lengths.

The post Hollis Sets Track Record In Upset Win At Oaklawn appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Mucho Much The Best In Challedon At Pimlico

A nose kept from him becoming a first-time stakes winner in his previous start, but there would be no denying WSS Racing and 4G Racing's Mucho the honor against a salty field in Saturday's $100,000 Challedon at historic Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md.

The 35th running of the six-furlong Challedon for 3-year-olds and up was the last of three $100,000 stakes on the final program of July, preceded by Hello Beautiful's victory in the Alma North and Harpers First Ride's triumph in the Deputed Testamony. All three races are part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series.

Mucho ($7.20) took the lead at the top of the stretch and turned back late challenges from multiple stakes winners Laki, Lebda, and Whereshetoldmetogo for a one-length victory in 1:10.09 over a fast main track under jockey Reylu Gutierrez.

“I told Rey, this horse is only getting sharper. Don't take anything away from the break,” Midwest-based winning trainer John Ortiz said. “Honestly, this is Rey's victory. He did everything right on the horse. He made all the right strategical moves. When he broke sharp, he kind of asked a little bit and made the horse on the inside chase and push and go through, and all we needed was a target. We needed a little speed, and he got it.”

Jockey J.D. Acosta was forced to hustle Lebda from his rail post to get by the alert-breaking Mucho, and was in front after a quarter-mile in :22.96. Grade 3 winner Laki and 3-2 favorite Whereshetoldmetogo, who have combined to win 13 stakes, raced side-by-side in behind with 37-1 long shot Whiskey and You trailing the field.

Laki maintained the lead following a half in :45.83 with Mucho turning up the pressure and Laki and Whereshetoldmetogo poised to strike while in the clear on the outside. Mucho forged a short lead once straightened for home, dug in past the eighth pole, and had plenty left to keep his challengers at bay.

Lebda held second by a neck over Whereshetoldmetogo, with Laki another half-length back in fourth.

Second as a 2-year-old in the 2018 Grade 1 Hopeful for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, Mucho came up just short of multiple stakes winner Bango in the seven-furlong Kelly's Landing June 25 at Churchill Downs. In his prior start, he finished ahead of both Laki and Lebda when fourth in the Grade 3 Maryland Sprint May 15 at Pimlico on the undercard of the 146th Grade 1 Preakness Stakes.

“The horse broke delightful today. Johnny's so good at getting horses out of the gate, with his morning training and routine,” Gutierrez said. “Watching his last going seven-eighths, I said, 'If he breaks sharp like that again today cutting back to three-quarters, I'm going to keep him there and keep him engaged.' I was able to make Lebda use a lot of horse to get the lead and I just had the trip. From the half to the three-eighths [pole], I got a really great breather to finish.

“This group of horses will probably be facing each other multiple times this year. Every trainer in this field, they do an amazing job with their stables and they're highly competitive so I'm very proud of our horse,” he added. “He beat them in the Maryland Sprint a couple starts ago so I really was expecting the same type of performance with him putting himself forwardly placed. I loved every second of it.”

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Mucho is a 5-year-old son of Blame, the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic winner and champion older horse of 2010. Ortiz hinted Mucho could find himself at the year-end championships should his star continue to rise.

“This horse has only been improving. He's gained more weight and is getting sharper and stronger. That's all we needed,” he said. “There might be a couple more starts before we end up in Del Mar, you never know. You gotta dream big, right?”

Not run during Maryland's pandemic-shortened 2020 stakes season, the Challedon honors the Maryland-bred son of Challenger II that won 20 of 44 starts and $334,660 in purses from 1938 to 1942, was recognized as Horse of the Year in 1939 and 1940, and inducted into the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame in 1977. Winner of the 1939 Preakness and 1939 and 1940 Pimlico Special, Challedon also sired 13 stakes winners before his death in 1958.

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