The Saratoga Special - This is Horse Racing
Transcription
The Saratoga Special - This is Horse Racing
The aratoga Thursday, August 6, 2015 Saratoga’s Daily Newspaper on Thoroughbred Racing Hey Champ Jump hero Demonstrative stands tall in Smithwick • Whatever happened to Mabou? • Cyclogenisis tackles Quick Call • Entries, Handicapping, More Tod Marks Year 15 • No. 10 Select Yearlings NY-Bred Yearlings Arch Algorithms 163 Quickest colt 167 Rate of Exchange colt 461 Dixie Lyrics colt Aug. 10-11 Yearlings by Claiborne Stallions Fasig-Tipton By KRIS S. Blame By ARCH Aug. 15-16 By BERNARDINI Blame By ARCH 454 Coy Cat colt 117 Voyage filly First Samurai Flatter 328 479 547 555 144 Be My Prospect colt 145 Bold Angel filly By A.P. INDY 110 Isle Get Ready filly Trappe Shot By TAPIT 143 Beer Baroness filly 100 Heritage House filly 191 Silver Bean colt War Front By DANZIG 104 Hostess filly 205 True Gritz colt By GIANT'S CAUSEWAY Regal Ruby filly Flame Trick colt Marc's Lark colt Michele the Great colt Flatter By A.P. INDY 309 333 345 511 526 Pink Lollipops colt River Nore colt Santa Croce colt Irving's Song colt Lady Aphrodite colt Trappe Shot By TAPIT 357 384 417 449 470 557 Silvereniecharm colt That's Ok colt Acquired Cat colt City Scamper filly Evangelical colt Miss Double Take colt P.O. Box 150 Paris, Kentucky 40362-0150 Tel.(859) 233-4252 Fax 765-0804 claibornefarm.com INQUIRIES TO BERNIE SAMS e-mail: bernie@claibornefarm.com © TOD MARKS 2 The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 here&there... at Saratoga BY THE NUMBERS 1: Buffalo Bills Terrell Owens jersey (No. 81) at the track Wednesday. 1: Rotary phone on a shelf outside a barn on the harness track (we’re afraid to pick it up). 4: Colors (at least) of ink used for notes on Andy Serling’s past performances for Wednesday. 6: Consecutive years All Together, who ran Wednesday, has started at Saratoga. The steeplechase veteran made two starts in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 – picking up wins in years two and four. 300: Dollars John Velazquez was fined for using his goggles (after dropping his whip) to encourage The Big Beast. LICENSE PLATES OF THE DAY 1CHASER, South Carolina. PLAC2BE, New York. NAMES OF THE DAY Fast Runner, fifth race. It’s got nothing to do with his pedigree, but DSR Farm was being optimistic anyway. The 3-year-old colt won two starts ago and is 15-1. Does your horse bite?. No, but that’s not my horse. DAR8573 Saratoga Special Medaglia 6 AUG15 05/08/2015 11:30 Page 1 Connie Bush To Be Determined, eighth race. Two guys in the back yard: Who do you like in the eighth? To Be Determined. No, who do you like in the eighth? To Be Determined. Come on man, who do you like in the eighth? I told, you To Be Determined. Fine, be that way . . . MEDAGLIA D’ORO The elite stallions ranked by their number of 2015 Black Type winners El Prado – Cappucino Bay (Bailjumper) 859-255-8537 www.darleyamerica.com The winning post… Racing’s moment of truth Medaglia d’Oro 17 Tapit 13 War Front 10 Northern hemisphere-foaled, as of August 6 Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special Darley 3 here&there... at Saratoga WORTH REPEATING “Shouldn’t you be at Monmouth?” Trainer Todd Pletcher to The Special’s Sean Clancy on Haskell Day “The foot is on the other end.” Luis Garcia, mixing a metaphor “I remember the first year you guys were doing it, I said, ‘That’s never going to work.’ ” Nick Caras, about The Special in 2001 “Thanks, I need all the coaching I can get.” Jock’s agent Jason Beides, when taking advice about how to be an agent “That looks like the island of misfit toys.” Jack Fisher, watching horses gallop on the infield turf “This is Hollywood Boulevard, where the stars hang out. I’m going to stand here for a while.” Trainer/exercise rider Robbie Davis, while standing at the Clement/Mott/McGaughey gap on the Oklahoma “Cyril, can we get your autograph?” Autograph seeker to jockey Jack Doyle (Cyril Murphy is the trainer) after the first Wednesday “Someday you’ll have a quote from me in there and I’ll be the only one who will know it’s me.” Saratoga Special reader Wednesday morning Stretch Battle. Congress Park hosts an old-school settling of differences. QUOTE OF THE DAY “Just hit the walk button, and when the cars stop go out in the middle of the street.” The Special’s Connie Bush, on how to take a photo of the Native Dancer sculpture from Union Avenue Tod Marks NAME OF THE DAY Gallery, ninth,race. Woke Up Tired first race. for Monday morningout of of sales week. TheAppropriate 3-year-old colt is by Munnings Little Theater. That’s us. YOUR SOURCE FOR NY-BREDS Phone: (518) 423-2028 www.saratogaglenfarm.com 800-523-8143 4 The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 The future is calling. Outdated technology only takes you so far. Are you going to answer? Modern technology. For the modern horseman. | Do More. With Less. www.istable.com Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 5 here&there... at Saratoga WORTH REPEATING “You’re always a little anxious coming into the Saratoga meet. The last thing you want to do is get off to a bad start. We felt like Opening Day things didn’t go that well, and I’m like, ughhhh, but since then things have been going on all cylinders.” Trainer Todd Pletcher on his strong run that continued Saturday and Sunday “It beats a cubicle.” Clocker Michael Vesce, as he stretched out his desk across the trunk of his car Wednesday morning “That’s half the stable tour.” Trainer Rusty Arnold, when shooing a cat away from a reporter’s golf cart “John Henry Wannabe.” Exercise rider, as his horse stopped and stared near Shug’s gap Wednesday morning “Maybe next year.” Trainer Rudy Rodriguez, when asked if he jumped his horses Wednesday morning “Do you want to ride him?” Trainer Bill Mott to a person who said he came to the barn to see Lea “My mother did.” Jump jockey Robbie Walsh when asked ‘Who knew you could sing?’ after winning the jockey karaoke “My phone’s been ringing all morning.” Jockey Mike Luzzi, after The Special wrote a column about his comeback Dave Harmon Tough Spot. At least one racegoer tried to put a foot wrong at the track last week. Raising and Selling Racehorses ® and its affiliate Mill Ridge Moments Editors/Publishers Sean Clancy: (302) 545-7713. sean@thisishorseracing.com Joe Clancy: (302) 545-4424. joe @thisishorseracing.com Managing Editor Tom Law: (859) 396-9407. tom@thisishorseracing.com Circulation/Advertising Sales/Etc.: Jack Clancy, Nolan Clancy. Writers/Handicappers: Charles Bedard, Billy Blake, Gaile Fitzgerald, Teresa Genaro, Annise Montplaisir, John Shapazian, Chad Summers, Brandon Valvo. Photographers: Tod Marks, Dave Harmon, Connie Bush. Joy B Gilbert © The NICOMA ® Visit Headley and Price online … millridge.com or nicoma.com aratoga 112 Spring Street, Suite 205 Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 www.thisishorseracing.com Published Wednesday through Sunday during the racing season. Every day of Sales Week Aug. 9-16. The Saratoga Special, thisishorseracing.com Thoroughbred Racing Calendar, The Best of The Saratoga Special. Call us about your editorial needs. Home Office: 364 Fair Hill Drive, Suite F, Elkton, MD 21921 (410) 392-5867 • Fax (410) 392-0170 Layout/Design: Kaitlyn Vishneowski. 6 The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 SARATOGA STABLE TOUR. T H E S A R AT O G A S A L E Meet the people & horses who make Saratoga GO! AUGUST 10-11 Stable Tour: Jimmy Toner added his name to the list of winners through the first 10 days of the meeting when Thieves Guild posted a mild upset in Sunday’s Caress Stakes. The pressure isn’t totally off by any means, not with horses for other clients in his shaded barn toward the southwestern corner of the main track stable area, but it certainly helps. “We got that out of the way and we’re live with some of the others,” Toner said. “If we get one or two more out of here great. It’s not easy but it takes the pressure off when you can win one early like we did and especially a stakes race.” Toner brought a dozen horses from Belmont Park and he’s got three at the Fair Hill Training Center with Tres Abbott. It’s a mix of older horses and some well-bred 2-year-olds, some that will be ready at this meet and others he hopes to run in the fall at Belmont. “I’m waiting for the babies to come back, especially two fillies, I’m anxious to see them run,” said Toner. “As long as you’ve got some nice babies it carries you through. If you’ve got good babies you’re good for another year.” From one end of the shedrow to the other, Toner talked about each of the dozen he brought to Saratoga with The Special’s Tom Law. Recepta: “She’s running in the De La Rose Saturday. She’s a stakes winner coming out of a fourth at Monmouth last time in the Eatontown. She won at Keeneland first time out this year. She fits in there. A lovely filly.” Wabbajack: “He runs once a year whether he needs to or not. He makes a good picture and he’s good to have around because everybody knows Wabbajack. He likes Saratoga. He’s never run here but he likes coming up here so we’ll try to run him before the meet is Thursday, August 6, 2015 with Jimmy Toner Every day at Saratoga, The Special (with help from sponsor Fasig-Tipton) presents an exclusive Stable Tour with a Saratoga trainer. For more, see: thisishorseracing.com/stabletours Cave Johnson: “He’s another for AJ Suited and is a (2-year-old) Broken Vow colt. Big, grand looking colt. Same thing with him. We’ll just bring him along, wait for the fall. He’s a nice looking colt.” Trainer Jimmy Toner’s barn still features Saratoga “pillows.” over. We’ll try, no guarantees. Like I said, he runs once or twice a year, whatever suits him.” Sheldon: “He ran here last week (sixth in Aug. 1 allowance). We’re just trying to find his level. The race he ran in was a non-winners of one that was kind of salty so I think we’ve got to find a different spot for him. We should find something later in the meet.” Hyper Nation: “She’s a 2-year-old filly who ran third to the filly that Todd Pletcher ran Opening Day in the Schuylerville (Positively Royal). She’s a Bernardini filly, lovely filly and she’s supposed to run here Aug. 16. She’s been training well and is a nice filly. We really like her. I wanted to make sure she had enough time before I ran her back.” Liberal Spin: “He ran good down at Belmont for $40,000 and I ran him up here in a non-winners of one, so we were a little ambitious. He ran July 25, just ambitiously placed. He’s OK. We’ll find a better spot. Anything will be better than the one I ran him in last time.” Jamaalaree: “She’s a New York-bred maiden. We’re going to enter her for Sunday. We ran her for maiden 40 and she was second. That’s her level.” Time And Motion: “She’s a Tapit filly out of Ellie’s Moment. Nice filly, been training good. She’s got a couple more breezes left. I’m undecided whether to run her on the dirt or the grass. She’s for John Phillips. Good family, Moment In Dixie. Anytime I get something from them I know they’re going to be good. She’ll run here and we’re looking forward to it. She’s been breezing on the dirt, breezing fine, but I want to breeze her on the grass once to see if it looks like she’s any better on the grass.” Manitoulin: “He’s a 2-year-old, by Awesome Again out of Soaring Softly. I can do that. Bad pedigree, right? John Phillips sends me these off-the-wall-bred horses. Of course I’m just kidding. I’m not in any rush. We’re just taking our time and will probably think about Belmont fall. Big, rangy colt. We’re not looking to be pushing the buttons too soon. Soaring Softly, I ran her at 2, she broke her maiden in the fall. Then I ran her at 3 on the dirt and I remember she ran well and I ran her in the Acorn and Mother Goose on the dirt. She didn’t handle it. When she turned 4 that’s when she went to the grass and was 7-for-8. The only time she got beat in the grass was here in the Diana. They used to run it late and that was the year of the drought. 1999.” The Saratoga Special Thieves Guild: “She’s one of those cases where you really feel like the patience paid off and there’s been a lot of effort and time put into her. We gave her as much time and opportunity as we could. She’s such a sweetheart, such a nice filly. I was telling somebody about when I bought her. I was in Delaware and Justin and Adam Driver were at Keeneland, talking to Craig Bandoroff. They were trying to buy her (privately). Craig had to talk to Bobby (Flay, her co-breeder), who was in New York. The phone call is going this way and that way. Finally Bobby said, ‘do you want the filly?’ I told him I’d give him this, he said he wanted that, and we finally got it done. Then I had to call them back to tell them it was OK.” Enjoy The Show: “He was second here in a good race July 26. He was making a good move and a horse that was in front of him broke down or pulled up and he had to check and come around. He ran really well. We’ll run him back in a similar race. If he gets back in he’s got a shot, so between the babies and him we have a shot to win another race or two.” Queen of New York: “She’s a New Yorkbred by First Samurai. She looks OK, too, and hopefully we get to run her up here. She belongs to a fellow named Victor Bahna. He owns this one and Jamaalaree, two half-sisters. He’s from Washington State. He used to be from New York but he moved there, and we have two New York-breds for him. She has a white spot on her back. We should have named her Queen of Canada because it looks like a maple leaf.” 7 The Chief . . . Day 10 Each year, the equine industry has a multi-billion-dollar economic impact on New York State. It provides tens of thousands of jobs while preserving the State’s irreplaceable farmland. $4.2-billion economic impact on the State “When I look back on it, Mr. Peters had cows, horses, polo ponies, hunters. Mr. Peters had a whole street in Islip, he owned all the houses. He had a man who was in charge of the whole estate, he had a guy who was in charge of the streets, my dad was in charge of the horses, somebody took care of the boat…he gave everybody a house to live in, I remember running around as a little boy with a sawed-off mallet, make believing I was playing polo. I had the whole gang on the street thinking they were playing polo. When I was three years old, I rode my tricycle, from my house, went along the street. My father was coming around the bend, riding the polo pony and ponying one, he came around and saw me, ‘Sonny, what are you doing here?’ He had to run back to the barn and ask someone to take the horses and run back and take me home, because by then my mom would have wondered where I was. It was different, now you’d be scared to death to let a kid play like that.” – Trainer Allen Jerkens, 1929-2015 Tod Marks photo The New York Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association www.nytha.com | 516.488.2337 visit us on Facebook New York equine industry provides 33,000 full-time jobs (859) 224-2756 www.thoroughbredaftercare.org $187 million in annual taxes paid from the horse industry to state and local governments of the day Building two-year-olds one individual at a time (859) 312-3414 | kirkwoodstables.com Projection of more than $60 million in restricted purse money and awards for NY-breds in 2015 For more information visit our website or call 518.388.0174 Loose Horse! No, not really. PHOTOS BY ADAM COGLIANESE, BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON, SKIP DICKSTEIN 8 The Saratoga Special Connie Bush nytbreeders.org | 518.587.0777 Thursday, August 6, 2015 Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 9 A.P. SMITHWICK MEMORIAL PREVIEW Big Horse Demonstrative casts long shadow on Gr. 1 BY JOE AND SEAN CLANCY Demonstrative looks too big for his corner stall in a barn at the harness track. There’s a window in the back, a fan on the bars in front, loads of hay, plenty of cushiony shavings to stand on, but he hangs his head out the door and watches – for visitors, for sulkies, for food, for attention. His trainer, Richard Valentine, polishes the brass on a leather lead shank and talks about the 2014 steeplechase champion, multiple Grade 1 winner, earner of $940,074 and heavy favorite for today’s $125,000 A.P. Smithwick Memorial steeplechase. “He’s the easiest one we have to train, it’s unbelievable,” Valentine said. “You can tell I’m nervous, but he doesn’t care about much at all. We worry, he doesn’t.” See SMITHWICK page 11 Demonstrative and Laird George power around the Oklahoma training track in preparation for today’s race. Tod Marks Join Us For Breakfast On The Porch 7 DAYS A WEEK 9:00 AM-11:30 AM 353 BROADWAY, SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY WWW.MAESTROSATTHEVANDAM.COM 518.306.6500 10 The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 Smithwick – Continued from page 10 Then Valentine snaps to attention. Demonstrative rubs his head on the doorjamb, steps back to the center of the stall, starts to sink to his knees, stops, slides to his left and rubs against the wall. “OK, OK,” the trainer said. “You want to roll, I get it.” Valentine attaches an unpolished shank to the champion’s halter, and heads to the sand across the way. Demonstrative rolls like a wet Labrador Retriever – down, over, halfway up, back down, over, all the way up, then repeats the whole thing on the other side. Then Valentine puts him back in the stall. Such is the life of the continent’s best steeplechaser. Today, Jacqueline Ohrstrom’s 8-year-old tries to win the only Grade 1 on the circuit he’s never won – the Smithwick. He carries 158 pounds, as many as 16 more than his seven rivals. Regular jockey Robbie Walsh gets aboard in the 2 1/16-mile race – the day’s opener. Demonstrative Thursday, August 6, 2015 Divine Fortune (left) and Parker’s Project go for a jog at the Oklahoma Annex. missed by a nose last year, and is 6-5 to make amends. You have to look hard to find a negative with the son of Elusive Quality, a winner in five of his last six starts. Sean Clancy “Ideally, 2 1/16 isn’t his best trip because he has been beaten in some shorter races,” said Valentine. “But he ran great in it last year and the way he accelerated at Parx really encouraged me. I was in shock. It set up for him, The Saratoga Special but it did his head a world of good.” The Parx race, 1 1/2 miles on the turf for steeplechasers July 12 was meant to be a Smithwick tuneup but Demonstrative went all Red Rifle on them and scored by 2 1/4 lengths with a late charge off the turn. Since then, it’s been steady training at the farm in Virginia and the last week in Saratoga. Bred in Kentucky by Gainsborough Farm, Demonstrative had a final training session Wednesday, blowing out a quarter-mile along the backstretch with assistant trainer Laird George aboard. “More and more we’re doing that, blowing them out closer to the race,” Valentine said. “It’s for their wind, their airway. I think there’s something to that, especially with older horses like this. I’m happy with him. He is good, he is very good.” Valentine sweats the 158 pounds, too, but also knows his horse’s constitution and reputation. “Well I gallop him and I’ve got to be . . . he’s used to carrying weight in the morning,” Valentine said. “We’re going up a hill at home, not all that fast. I never work him. He’s not a litSee SMITHWICK page 12 11 Smithwick – Continued from page 11 tle, small, light horse. And I know he’s earned it. If we continue to have the success, this might be his last year of running at Saratoga. I don’t think he’s going to be able to carry 160 or more around here, but we’ll see. Let’s worry about this year.” A Smithwick win, worth $75,000, would put Demonstrative over the $1 million mark in combined career earnings – though just shy of that number in jump earnings. As Demonstrative chilled in his stall on the harness side, Jonathan Sheppard applied the finishing touches to his three-horse brigade Divine Fortune, Martini Brother and Parker’s Project on the other side of East Avenue in the Annex. Sheppard sent out Martini Brother for an easy school in the infield of the Oklahoma turf course. Jockey Darren Nagle navigated the exercise, nothing more than going over the notes before the presentation. Martini Brother popped over one hurdle, pulled up and then skipped through two before coming home. “He’s been down over the three hurdles at home, but I figured he better see one after being away,” Sheppard said. Away from jump racing since March, 2014, the son of A.P. Indy and Grade I winner Island Sand returns in the deep end. A place where Sheppard threw him in 2013 when he finished 3rd in the New York Turf Writers Cup, in just his seventh hurdle start. Since then, it’s been spilled paint, as Martini Brother finished sixth in the William Entenmann Novice Stakes, fell in the Grand National and made just one start in 2014. This year, Sheppard dusted him off for a training flat race at Parx in July where he finished sixth behind Bob Le Beau. “Martini is the wildcard, Darren chose him, I gave him his choice between Divine and him and he said he would choose him over pretty much any horse in the country. That’s Darren’s opinion, I do think he’s a horse with untapped potential.” Sheppard said. “He hasn’t really got the seasoning, he’s run once over jumps in two years and that was 15 months ago. He had a nice prep at Parx, didn’t run badly and he’s a better horse with a fence in front of him.” Owned by Bill Pape, Martini Brother receives 16 pounds from Demonstrative. “He gets in light, he could be a sleeper,” Sheppard said. “I still think he’s got it, I can’t prove it but from what I see, I think he can run with the big boys and hold his own.” After the school, Nagle returned on Martini Brother, slipped the tack off and talked to Sheppard about doing 142. The jockey said he could do it, the trainer said to be strong. They nodded and one of three final touches was complete. Assistants Keri Brion and Theresa Dimpfl grabbed their tack for the final two. Brion tacked up 12-year-old Divine Fortune while Dimpfl pre- 12 Bob Le Beau is a live lightweight in today’s Grade 1 A.P. Smithwick. pared 9-year-old Parker’s Project. Using a picnic table as a mounting block, Brion swung aboard Divine Fortune. The $808,890 earner jogged off, mane blowing in the breeze, neck like a periscope, head bouncing, mouth open. “He’s not as quick as he was, but he seems to be training really well, he’s very enthusiastic,” Sheppard said, as Divine Fortune jigged in circles around the trees. “Keri rides him in all his works, she can’t pull him up at the end. This is a bit short for him at this stage, but we’ll get a run into him and see how we do, hopefully, we’ll do well or lose a few pounds for the Turf Writers.” Owned and bred by Pape and Sheppard, Divine Fortune carries 154 pounds, in receipt of 4 pounds from last year’s champion Demonstrative. They are old friends, they’ll face each other for the 15th time today. They have swapped wins, traded championships and earned respect. Demonstrative won their latest meeting, when getting up in the final stride to win the 3-mile Iroquois, as Divine Fortune finished fourth. Sheppard wrote a line through that one. “I didn’t think we used Divine’s stamina at Iroquois, he was in front, but he was never in front by a big margin, it turned into a five eighths of a mile sprint,” Sheppard said. “He was passed three fences from home, I was quite pleased that he didn’t spit the bit out, he kept on running, they just ran a bit quicker than he did the last part.” The Saratoga Special Tod Marks Willie McCarthy reunites with Divine Fortune for the first time since this race last year when the duo pulled up. McCarthy guided Divine Fortune to a flawless win in the Iroquois before last year’s Smithwick. Parker’s Project completes the trio. Bred by Sheppard and owned by Hudson River Farm, the son of Parker’s Storm Cat owns four wins, five seconds and four thirds over hurdles, including a win in the David Semmes this spring. Ross Geraghty reunites with Parker’s Project, the duo finished second behind Demonstrative in the Lonesome Glory and third behind him in the Grand National last year. “Parker is a solid, useful horse,” Sheppard said. “He’s had two good runs this year, coming up to it well, whether he’s good enough to beat Demonstrative, I rather question, but I don’t think he’ll be disgraced. He should give an honest effort.” As Sheppard said this, Divine Fortune and Parker’s Project jogged in loops in the corner of the Annex lawn before going across Fifth Avenue and Union Avenue to paddock school. Yes, paddock school two horses with combined ages of 21. Beyond the big four, there are the other four. Elizabeth Voss tried Bob Le Beau at Saratoga last summer. The Irish-bred failed to register a blow in two tries, finishing 9 lengths behind in the Kiser and losing his jockey, Jack Doyle, in the Mickey See SMITHWICK page 13 Thursday, August 6, 2015 Smithwick – Continued from page 12 Walsh. The 8-year-old improved in one start in the fall, finishing second behind All Together in the W. Gary Baker. He pulled up in his next start and Voss regrouped, waiting until May to unveil him again. Bob Le Beau made the wait worth it with a strong win in the National Hunt Cup at Radnor. “He’s a completely different horse, when we had him up here last year, he was stiff, had some back issues, we just gave him a lot of time off. We took our time with him this spring, Jack came back after Radnor and said he feels like a different horse,” Voss said. “He’s doing great up here, he schooled great Tuesday, jumped one and we called it quits, he knows what he’s doing. I’m going to just put Jack up, I’m not giving him any instructions.” Bob Le Beau routed eight rivals in a training flat race at Parx in July. Voss is happy with her horse, but knows the task at hand. “Obviously, we’re taking on the big boys,” Voss said. Sonny Via’s Hinterland makes his American debut for leading trainer Jack Fisher. The 7-year-old won five times and finished third in the prestigious Tingle Creek at Sandown in December. Purchased from Britain’s champion trainer, Paul Nicholls, the 7-year-old French-bred makes his first start since December. He’s failed to finish in three of his previous five starts. Fisher also sends out Choral Society for Petticoats Loose Farm. The 6-year-old makes his first start outside the restricted novice division. The son of Holy Bull finished 9 ¾ lengths behind Syros, who failed as the favorite in Monday’s Jonathan Kiser Stakes, in the Marcellus Frost in May. Four-time champion Paddy Young takes the call. Owner/trainer Jimmy Day purchased Diplomat in England in October and reaped a quick reward when the son of Kitten’s Joy won the restricted Carolina Cup in March. Diplomat failed to threaten against Parker’s Project in the Semmes in May. Day prepped him in a training flat race at Parx July 12, finishing 3 ¼ lengths behind Bob Le Beau. If you’re a Beyer follower, Bob Le Beau earned a 79 figure in his Parx win while Demonstrative earned a 58. Thursday, August 6, 2015 Get them back on track FAIR HILL EQUINE THERAPY CENTER Rehabilitation, Sports Medicine and Conditioning for the Equine Athlete Fair Hill Equine Therapy Center is a state-of-the-art facility that houses the latest in technological equipment, designed to promote a safe and rapid advancement for horses recovering from injury or returning from a rest. fairhilletc.com visit our website for comprehensive videos NEW Aqua Pacer Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Cold Salt Spa Dry Salt Vapor Therapy Vibration Therapy Solarium Fair Hill Training Center 721 Training Center Drive, Elkton, Maryland 21921 Bruce Jackson Cell: 610-496-5080 • Office: 410-620-2175 • Fax: 410-620-2176 • bruce@fairhilletc.com The Saratoga Special 13 World Traveler Cyclogenisis returns from stay at prestigious Warren Place Stables BY ANNISE MONTPLAISIR Cyclogenisis stood calmly next to George Weaver’s shedrow Tuesday morning, foot cocked, awaiting his turn for morning training. Peaceful as the big-boned gray appeared, his training session was anything but, and was complete with rearing and a good buck or two. Once he got rolling, the enormous 3-year-old son of Stormy Atlantic looked and sounded like a freight train as he galloped over the grass on the infield of the Oklahoma Training Track. QUICK CALL PREVIEW After breaking his maiden at Saratoga Race Course and winning the Laurel Futurity last year and winning his seasonal debut in a stakes at Presque Isle Downs this spring, Cyclogenisis ventured overseas and into top company. He finished 14th in the Group 1 Commonwealth Cup at the prestigious Royal Ascot meeting. Cyclogenisis was freshened up a bit after that effort and will try to get back on track and repeat last year’s success Loyalty. Service. Substance. “ “ TLore is the only stable management system we have used in nearly twenty years of training. Tracy goes above and beyond to meet our individual needs, all at an extremely competitive price. Maryland Jockey Club/Jim McCue Cyclogenisis makes his first start since racing at Royal Ascot in England. at Saratoga when he runs in today’s $100,000 Quick Call Stakes. “It was cool,” trainer George Weaver said about the Royal Ascot experience. “We were a little bit disappointed, but it was kind of 6 furlongs up the hill, and I would say that if I could do it all over again I would probably have a little more experience, more speed work up hills. “We got over there a week out. We were only able to breeze him once, didn’t have company. So you know, it’s a new place, it’s unfamiliar. He just didn’t fire what we thought he could do.” Cyclogenisis was stabled in Newmarket during his stay in England, at the storied Warren Place Stables where scores of top horses including Frankel have been based over the years. “We’d love to go back there again if we had the opportunity, and I probably would go in earlier,” Weaver said. “We had a fun trip over there. That’s one of the perks of this game, you know, is that horses can take you places.” If there were any doubts as to how Cyclogenisis handled the trip to and from Ascot, the energy he showed during his morning training this week laid them to rest. See QUICK CALL page 15 – Todd Pletcher Racing Stables TLore is a Thoroughbred Racehorse Management Service. For more information contact Tracy Attfield (954) 647-3220 | TLore.net 14 TLore The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 Quick Call – Continued from page 14 “He can be a handful,” exercise rider Chase Miller said. “He’s got a good personality. I’ve been riding him for a while now, but yeah, he can be a handful. He’s a happy horse, flighty horse, he gets up in the air a lot, but I enjoy riding him. He’s pretty easy, he just does what he needs to do.” Cyclogenisis and Miller took a couple spins around the infield grass course Tuesday before making their way back to the barn with another Weaver trainee. He’s breezed three times since getting back into serious training following the trip to England, including a half-mile on the main track last Friday and a half-mile on the Oklahoma grass course July 17. “He’s one of the hardiest horses we’ve had,” Weaver said. “Always healthy, never has a fever. He’s just a hardy son of a gun.” Cyclogenisis will face a deep field in the Quick Call with Grade 2 winner Ready For Rye, stakes winners The Great War and Gallery and last-out allowance winners Disco Partner, Beantown Saint, Bottle Rocket, Sleeping Giant and Element all in the mix. Zandar, a stakes-placed 2-year-old last year and a winner two back on the grass, is also entered. The Great War is the most intriguing member of the field as he makes his first start since finishing 10th and last in the John Battaglia Memorial in late February at Turfway Park. The son of War Front bled badly at Turfway and was immediately withdrawn from consideration for the Triple Crown. A $1 million purchase as a yearling at the 2013 Keeneland September sale, The Great War started his career in Europe for his Coolmore connections and trainer Aidan O’Brien. He won three races in Ireland, including a small stakes at The Curragh before venturing to the U.S. for the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile on dirt at Santa Anita. He was fourth, beaten 8 1/4 lengths by runaway winner Texas Red, in the Juvenile in his first start beyond 6 ½ furlongs. The Great War stayed in the U.S. after that race and joined trainer Wesley Ward’s string in Kentucky. He made an immediate impression when he romped to victory in the 96Rock Stakes on the Polytrack at Turfway to earn a spot in the Battaglia field. Ward hoped to run The Great War in last weekend’s Grade 2 Amsterdam, but scratched because he felt the field was too tough. “I’m sure some of those horses will be in the Breeders’ Cup,” Ward said of the field that included Holy Boss, Requite, Barbados and March. Holy Boss won the Amsterdam by 2 ¼ lengths over Requite for his fourth straight victory. Ward also opted out of the Amsterdam because he wanted to get The Great War back on a surface “he’s more used to” so the Quick Call was the choice. Joel Rosario picks up the mount on the 7-2 second choice on the morning line. Ready For Rye, the 5-2 favorite, won the Grade 2 Swale Stakes going 7 furlongs on the dirt at Gulfstream Park earlier this winter for trainer Tom Albertrani and was third in a pair of Grade 3 sprint stakes in New York before moving to the turf. He won his debut on the grass going 7 furlongs last month at Belmont under Javier Castellano, who rides again today. Mike Dini, who is based at Monmouth Park, won Wednesday’s third race with Got Winged and sends out Gallery for the same Ballybrit Stables ownership group. Gallery won the Manila Stakes going 1 mile on the grass at Belmont and was eighth, beaten only 2 lengths by Force The Pass, in the Grade 3 Penn Mile three starts back. The son of Munnings has never sprinted on the turf, but raced twice at 5 1/2 furlongs on Polytrack last summer at Arlington Park. “He’s doing well,” Dini said after celebrating Got Winged’s victory. “I really think he will run a big one tomorrow. Same kind of style (as Got Winged). He showed speed going long but sprinting I would think he will come off the pace.” Additional reporting by Tom Law and Billy Blake thisishorseracing.com Sunrise Stallions Sheets Big Brown • Frost Giant • Heavy Breathing HOWFROSTYITIS 3YO gelding by Frost Giant Thursday, Race 3 Sunrise Stables, Owner Ray Handal, Trainer Andrew Cohen, Breeder Good luck to everyone at Saratoga, but especially to the connections of HOWFROSTYITIS! Sunrise Stallions – Standing dual classic winner and champion Big Brown and Heavy Breathing at Dutchess Views Farm in Pine Plains, N.Y.; and Frost Giant at Keane Stud in Amenia, N.Y. Eric Bishop | Eric@SunriseStallions.com | 516-606-9768 Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 15 SARATOGA ENTRIES Thursday, August 6. 1ST (1:00PM). $125,000, STK - A.P. SMITHWICK MEMORIAL, 4&UP, 2 1/16M (HURDLE) Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Hinterland (FR)............... S. McDermott................... J. Fisher...................... 15-1 2 ..... 2.............Demonstrative................. R. Walsh........................... R. Valentine................... 6-5 3 ..... 3.............Parker’s Project............... R. Geraghty...................... J. Sheppard................... 8-1 4 ..... 4.............Diplomat......................... B. Dalton........................... J. Day.......................... 12-1 5 ..... 5.............Bob Le Beau (IRE)........... J. Doyle............................ E. Voss.......................... 6-1 6 ..... 6.............Divine Fortune................. W. McCarthy..................... J. Sheppard................... 3-1 7 ..... 7.............Martini Brother................ D. Nagle............................ J. Sheppard................. 12-1 8 ..... 8.............Choral Society................. P. Young........................... J. Fisher...................... 20-1 2ND (1:33PM). $50,000, CLM $25,000, 3 YO’S & UP, F & M , 1 1/8M Exacta, Quinella, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Pic 5, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Lotsa Noodles................. I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... R. Rodriguez................. 5-2 2 ..... 2.............Ginny’s Grey.................... J. Alvarado....................... O. Barrera, III................ 4-1 3 ..... 3.............Star of the Forest............ C. Velasquez..................... D. Jacobson.................. 3-1 4 ..... 4.............So Good to Go................ L. Saez.............................. S. Asmussen................. 5-1 5 ..... 5.............Bounty Pink..................... E. Cancel........................... D. Gargan...................... 7-2 6 ..... 6.............Rock Show...................... F. Jara............................... J. Parker...................... 12-1 3RD (2:06PM). $39,000, MCL $25,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 6 1/2F Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Pic 4, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Louie’s Luck.................... A. Arroyo.......................... C. Englehart................... 5-1 2 ..... 2.............How Frosty It Is............... S. Russell......................... R. Handal.................... 15-1 3 ..... 3.............Bytemark......................... J. Ortiz.............................. J. Englehart................. 15-1 4 ..... 4.............Sandy Strikes.................. P. Lopez............................ K. Breen...................... 12-1 5 ..... 5.............Cats Landing................... J. Castellano..................... G. Sciacca................... 10-1 6 ..... 6.............Unforced......................... J. Leparoux....................... M. Maker..................... 20-1 7 ..... 7.............Proletariat....................... M. Franco......................... B. Brown....................... 8-1 8 ..... 8.............Frontier Scout................. L. Saez.............................. J. Sharp....................... 10-1 9 ..... 9.............Afleet’s Edge................... J. Alvarado....................... J. Servis........................ 7-2 10..... 10...........The Crocheron Kid.......... S. Bridgmohan................. W. Turner, Jr................ 30-1 11..... 11...........Call Me Stoney................ K. Carmouche................... B. Levine....................... 3-1 12..... 12...........The Fixer......................... E. Cancel........................... J. Terranova, II............ 10-1 4TH (2:39PM). $50,000, CLM $25,000, 3 YO’S & UP, F & M , 5 1/2F (TURF) Exacta, Quinella, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Sunrise Kitty................... J. Lezcano........................ J. Servis........................ 2-1 2 ..... 2.............Ave’s Halo....................... J. Rosario......................... A. Adsit....................... 10-1 3 ..... 3.............Look At Me Dance........... I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... P. Farro........................ 20-1 4 ..... 4.............Chelsea Road.................. L. Saez.............................. J. Sharp......................... 6-1 5 ..... 5.............Magsamelia..................... J. Castellano..................... G. Contessa................... 7-2 6 ..... 6.............Colonel Juanita............... K. Carmouche................... J. Sharp....................... 12-1 7 ..... 7.............Claiming Victory.............. J. Bravo............................ J. Orseno....................... 4-1 8 ..... 8.............Pura Vida Zen.................. M. Franco......................... S. Klesaris..................... 8-1 5TH (3:12PM). $32,000, CLM $16,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 1 1/8M Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Pic 6, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Humbolt Street................ L. Saez.............................. G. Sciacca..................... 6-1 2 ..... 2.............Igotthediscoinme............ J. Alvarado....................... O. Barrera, III................ 4-1 3 ..... 3.............Yakov.............................. S. Bridgmohan................. B. Brown....................... 5-1 4 ..... 4.............Majestic Guy................... A. Worrie.......................... E. Reiff.......................... 8-1 5 ..... 5.............Pioneer of Wifi................ R. Silvera.......................... R. Metivier................... 20-1 6 ..... 6.............Sugar Gold...................... I. Rodriguez...................... J. Hertler....................... 8-1 7 ..... 7.............Whats Up Big Guy........... K. Carmouche................... D. Cannizzo................. 10-1 8 ..... 8.............Unbridledcharacter.......... E. Cancel........................... A. Dutrow...................... 2-1 9 ..... 9.............Fast Runner..................... M. Franco......................... M. Wilson.................... 15-1 thisishorseracing.com 6TH (3:45PM). $93,000, AOC $80,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 1 3/8M (INNER TURF) Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............St. Albans Boy................. E. Prado............................ K. Rubley....................... 8-1 2 ..... 2.............Montclair (IRE)............... J. Rosario......................... C. Clement.................... 5-2 3 ..... 3.............Unbridled Command....... J. Ortiz.............................. G. Contessa................. 15-1 4 ..... 4.............Messi (GER).................... J. Velazquez...................... H. Motion...................... 2-1 5 ..... MTO.......Turco Bravo (CHI)........... . ....................................... G. Contessa................... 6-5 6 ..... 6.............Tattenham....................... K. Carmouche................... L. Gyarmati................. 12-1 7 ..... 7.............Reflecting........................ J. Lezcano........................ C. McGaughey III.......... 3-1 8 ..... 8.............I’ll Call............................. I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... C. Martin..................... 10-1 7TH (4:18PM). $56,000, MCL $75,000, 3 YO’S & UP, F & M , 1 1/16M (TURF) Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Pic 4, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Fine Instincts................... J. Castellano..................... T. Pletcher..................... 5-2 2 ..... 2.............Thebeatofthestreet.......... I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... C. Brown....................... 7-2 3 ..... 3.............Jemmabelle..................... J. Alvarado....................... T. Albertrani................. 20-1 4 ..... 4.............Mighty Katherine............. E. Cancel........................... I. Wilkes...................... 30-1 5 ..... 5.............Hashtag Bonnie............... K. Carmouche................... L. Gyarmati................. 30-1 6 ..... 6.............Miss Mizzen Silver.......... J. Lezcano........................ M. Maker....................... 4-1 7 ..... 7.............Matty’s Wondergirl.......... M. Franco......................... D. Donk....................... 20-1 8 ..... 8.............Belpiana.......................... J. Leparoux....................... D. Carroll..................... 15-1 9 ..... 9.............Written in Stars............... J. Ortiz.............................. J. Terranova, II............ 12-1 10..... 10...........Stormy Alexis (IRE)........ J. Velazquez...................... G. Weaver..................... 8-1 11..... 11...........The Strip......................... C. Lanerie......................... K. McPeek................... 10-1 12..... 12...........Lana’s Fortune................. L. Saez.............................. P. Serpe....................... 12-1 13..... AE..........Robe............................... J. Alvarado....................... W. Mott......................... 5-1 14..... MTO.......Flick of an Eye................. J. Velazquez...................... D. Gargan...................... 7-2 15..... MTO.......Where’s Poppa................ M. Franco......................... G. Contessa................. 12-1 8TH (4:52PM). $62,000, CLM $40,000, 3 YO, F , 6F Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Pic 3, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............To Be Determined............ R. Hernandez.................... W. Ward........................ 7-5 2 ..... 2.............Red Rei Rei..................... M. Franco......................... R. Violette, Jr................. 6-1 3 ..... 3.............Perfect Fit........................ L. Saez.............................. W. Calhoun.................... 6-1 4 ..... 4.............Concealedwithakiss......... P. Lopez............................ E. Plesa, Jr.................. 12-1 5 ..... 5.............Know It All Anna............. J. Castellano..................... M. Maker....................... 4-1 6 ..... 6.............Grandpa’s Princess......... J. Velazquez...................... G. Weaver..................... 5-1 7 ..... 7.............Mom’z Laugh.................. I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... M. Vitali....................... 12-1 9TH (5:26PM). $100,000, STK - THE QUICK CALL, 3 YO, 5 1/2F (TURF) Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta, Daily Double 1 ..... 1.............Disco Partner.................. I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... J. Ryerson................... 30-1 2 ..... 2.............Beantown Saint............... K. Carmouche................... J. Servis........................ 6-1 3 ..... 3.............The Great War................. J. Rosario......................... W. Ward........................ 7-2 4 ..... 4.............Zandar............................. J. Ortiz.............................. T. Morley..................... 12-1 5 ..... 5.............Ready for Rye................. J. Castellano..................... T. Albertrani................... 5-2 6 ..... 6.............Bottle Rocket................... J. Leparoux....................... K. McLaughlin............. 15-1 7 ..... 7.............Cyclogenisis.................... J. Velazquez...................... G. Weaver..................... 4-1 8 ..... 8.............Gallery............................. J. Lezcano........................ M. Dini........................ 15-1 9 ..... 9.............Sleeping Giant................. J. Alvarado....................... S. Asmussen............... 15-1 10..... 10...........Element........................... L. Saez.............................. T. Pletcher................... 10-1 10TH (6:00PM). $40,000, MCL $30,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 1 1/8M Exacta, Trifecta, Superfecta 1 ..... 1.............U. S. S. Boxer.................. J. Castellano..................... M. Maker....................... 5-1 2 ..... 2.............Banker’s Boss................. J. Lezcano........................ G. Gullo......................... 8-1 3 ..... 3.............Curly’s Pal....................... M. Franco......................... A. Iwinski.................... 20-1 4 ..... 4.............Gursky............................ L. Saez.............................. M. Trombetta................. 3-1 5 ..... 5.............Shadow Rider................. I. Ortiz, Jr.......................... G. Weaver..................... 7-2 6 ..... 6.............Mandolin Wins................ J. Ortiz.............................. D. Donk....................... 12-1 7 ..... 7.............Summer Dancer.............. S. Bridgmohan................. D. Cannizzo................. 12-1 8 ..... 8.............Jet Streak........................ E. Cancel........................... J. Lawrence, II............. 12-1 9 ..... 9.............Big House....................... A. Cintron......................... M. Mareina.................. 15-1 10..... 10...........Talk Time......................... J. Velazquez...................... M. Hennig................... 12-1 11..... 11...........Lieutenant Dale............... J. Rosario......................... N. Zito......................... 10-1 Copyright 2015 EQUIBASE Company LLC. All Rights Reserved. 16 The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 the Power grid Race # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2015 Records: John Shapazian Tom Law Gaile Fitzgerald Charles Bedard Chad Summers Demonstrative Divine Fortune Bob Le Beau Lotsa Noodles So Good to Go Bounty Pink Call Me Stoney Afleet’s Edge Louie’s Luck Sunrise Kitty Charming Victory Pura Vida Zen Unbridledcharacter Yakov Igotthediscoinme Messi Montclair Reflecting Fine Instincts Robe Thebeatofthestreet To Be Determined Grandpa’s Princess Know It All Anna Cyclogenisis Ready for Rye The Great War U.S.S. Boxer Shadow Rider Gursky Demonstrative Divine Fortune Parker’s Project Star Of The Forest Lotsa Noodles Bounty Pink Afleet’s Edge Proletariat Frontier Scout Chelsea Road Magsamelia Sunrise Kitty Unbridledcharacter Yakov Sugar Gold Montclair Messi Reflecting Robe Thebeatofthestreet Written In Stars To Be Determined Grandpa’s Princess Know It All Anna Cyclogenisis Ready For Rye The Great War Shadow Rider U. S. S. Boxer Lieutenant Dale Demonstrative Divine Fortune Bob Le Beau Lotsa Noodles Bounty Pink So Good To Go Afleet’s Edge Call Me Stoney Louie’s Luck Sunrise Kitty Colonel Juanita Ave’s Halo Unbridled Character Igotthediscoinme Yakov Turco Bravo Messi Montclair Flick Of An Eye Thebeatofthestreet Fine Instincts To Be Determined Grandpa’s Princess Perfect Fit Cyclogenisis Ready For Rye Disco Partner Shadow Rider Gursky U.S.S. Boxer Divine Fortune Demonstrative Hinterland Bounty Pink Star Of The Forest Lotsa Noodles Afleet’s Edge Louie’s Luck Call Me Stoney Claiming Victory Ave’s Halo Magsamelia Unbridled Character Yakov Humbolt Street Turco Bravo Unbridled Command St. Albans Boy Fine Instincts Stormy Alexis Jemmabelle To Be Determined Perfect Fit Grandpa’s Princess The Great War Beantown Saint Ready For Rye Big House Gursky Summer Dancer Demonstrative Divine Fortune Bob Le Beau Star of the Forest Bounty Pink Lotsa Noodles Afleet’s Edge Call Me Stoney Proletariat Sunrise Kitty Magsamelia Claiming Victory Unbridledcharacter Sugar Gold Humbolt Street Messi Reflecting Unbridled Command Thebeatofthestreet Fine Instincts Stormy Alexis To Be Determined Mom’z Laugh Know It All Anna Cyclogenesis Ready for Rye Sleeping Giant Big House Talk Time Summer Dancer 30/112 22/112 31/112 23/112 32/112 Parting Glass Racing High Earning Horses Top Class Trainers Leading Jockeys Racing in NY, LA and FL Thursday, August 6, 2015 Join us NOW! 1-877-RACE-WIN (877-722-3946) Email pgr@partingglassracing.com or see www.partingglassracing.com Be an OWNER at The Spa. Mornings on the backstretch, afternoons at the races, evenings celebrating. Join the fun and excitement of horse racing at the best track in the world. The Saratoga Special 17 Home Boy Mabou Four years removed from surprise claim, G1 winner enjoys life BY TERESA GENARO Four years ago Tuesday, David Jacobson claimed a horse at Saratoga. Nothing terribly unusual about that, nor about the fact that Jacobson ran the horse, who had finished fifth, back 21 days later, nor that the trainer bumped the bay gelding way up in class for that next start, nor that Jacobson won with the horse, first off the claim. But Jacobson himself might have been among the very few not surprised that the win came in a Grade 1 over hurdles. When the anniversary of that win comes along Aug. 25, Mabou will be far from the site of his greatest victory, grazing on a Long Island farm and being doted on by his new owner, Nicole Sottilo. After paying $35.20 in the 2011 New York Turf Writers Cup, Mabou made just five more starts, never getting back to the winner’s circle. He retired in late 2012 with a record of 38-10-2-3, six of those wins, and his lone stakes victory, coming over jumps. Long before Jacobson, the son of Dynaformer and the Royal Academy mare Royal Dove was bred in Kentucky by Ironwater Farms and sold at Keeneland September (2004) for $80,000. Mabou got claimed in his first start, going from Michael Courtesy of Nicole Sottilo Ex-racehorse Mabou and owner Nicole Sottilo jump a fence at a horse show. Moran to Tim Ritchey for $50,000 in 2006. Two years later, Mabou got claimed again – and joined the steeplechase string of owner Ken Ramsey and trainer Tom Voss. The bay gelding won five of his first nine, and was claimed for $30,000 by Jacobson early in the Saratoga meet. The rest is history – the Turf Writers win next out, then just five more starts (three on the flat) and retirement. “He had a few little issues, but nothing serious,” said Jacobson of the decision to retire him. “If he’d been a flat runner, we might have kept him racing, but it can get kind of rough out there jumping, and he’d been so good to us that we didn’t want to take any chances.” So Jacobson (who claimed steeplechaser All Together Wednesday at Saratoga in what might be an attempt at repeating history) and owner Drawing Away Stable gave him to Robin Gibbs, who has worked with other Jacobson layups and retirees at her Calverton, N.Y. barn. It was there that Nicole Sottilo met him. On a late spring Saturday afternoon, Sottilo, along with her parents, walked along a path behind the barn out to a paddock. Befitting a horse of his age, 12, and accomplishments, Mabou was a bit standoffish when first called, but it didn’t take long before he ambled over to greet them. A 10-year client at the barn, Sottilo leased Mabou for six months before her family made the decision to purchase him though she was initially hesitant to ride an off-track Thoroughbred. Mabou quickly won her over, and in December 2013, he became hers. Or maybe it’s the other way around. See MABOU page 19 Saratoga Race Course - Saratoga Springs, NY Fair Hill Training Facility, MD ©K. Rengert Photography A wide range of safe, strong and durable PVCu fencing systems, ideal for all equestrian fencing. www.duralock.com 18 e: joe@duralock.com The Saratoga Special t:1-859-608-2407 Thursday, August 6, 2015 Mabou – Continued from page 18 “I never thought I’d want a Thoroughbred, because I hate going fast,” she said. “But he’s chill.” Chill, calm, placid – pick your adjective for the horse at the end of the lead in Sottilo’s hand, grazing on the spring grass at his new home. There is no trace of the competitive beast that launched himself over Saratoga’s hurdles just a few years ago, but Sottilo swears he remembers those days. “He’s good in the ring,” she said, “but he just does it because we’re asking him to, not because he’s having fun. He likes hunting, jumping logs and bushes, and I think it’s because it reminds him of the race course.” He’s relaxed then, she said, with a clear preference for being outside. A lawyer by trade, Sottilo rode on the equestrian team at St. Joseph’s College on Long Island. Said her father Charles, “She’s got so many ribbons we don’t know what to do with them. We’ve got them hanging in my truck.” She rides now more for pleasure than for competition, going to the barn several days during the week and on weekends. “On Saturday I’m here for hours,” she said. “I take my time and groom him, ride him, graze RACE 13 him, give him a bath.” Though sound when retired, he was a project for his new owner, needing to learn a few lessons to adjust to his new life. “I had to teach him how to balance, and how to jump not when going fast,” she said. “He uses different muscles now, and we had to build those up so that he could carry himself.” He’s also a little, shall we say, particular. “We call him the Princess and the Pea,” said Sottilo. “We had to get a custom saddle for him because if it’s not perfect, he loses it.” But she is quick to give credit to the people who had him before she did. “Whoever started him did a wonderful job,” she said. “He knew a lot – moving off your leg, bending. He’s very smart.” Looking ahead, Sottilo is eyeing 3-foot adult equitation events for him. He won reserve champion in his last two shows, showing in the jumpers, where he got to strut a little bit of his old stuff. “He loves the jumpers,” she said, “because he can go as fast as he wants.” Back at the barn, he shows none of that intensity, nuzzling Sottilo as she walks past, resting his head on her shoulder. “He’s definitely gotten more personable and sweeter,” observed Sottilo’s mother Karen. “It’s different now,” said her daughter. “He’s got his own people.” Courtesy of Nicole Sottilo Mabou soaks up plenty of attention in his new life. Our Team - Your Success www.EQUIXBIO.com ® Photo by Z The Benchmark of Equine Performance Diets Race 13® is the choice of leading trainers around the world. The highly palatable formula provides the equine athlete with a variety of energy sources for a physical and mental advantage. Backed by extensive research and proven by champions and a Triple Crown winner, Race 13® is the fuel needed to compete and win through the most rigorous of racing campaigns. Give us a call or stop by to see how we can help fuel your success! She won six other stakes, over $600,000 and ranks as Capote’s leading money-winning filly in North America. HALLWAYFEEDS.COM Thursday, August 6, 2015 800 753 4255 Photo by Barbara Livingston The Saratoga Special 19 Power Move Stewart charge Unbridled Forever catches Stonetastic in deep stretch Unbridled Forever (5) rallies past Stonetastic in the stretch of Wednesday’s Shine Again. BY TOM LAW Dallas Stewart was in Saratoga all of three days earlier in the meet before duty called and he went back to his base at Churchill Downs to oversee Tale Of Verve’s final preparations for last weekend’s West Virginia Derby. Stewart wound up staying in Louisville, missed Tale Of Verve’s race at Mountaineer Park and missed Unbridled Forever’s victory in Wednesday’s $100,000 Shine Again Stakes at Saratoga Race Course. The absences certainly weren’t by choice. “I was there in Saratoga for three days, had to come back home to get ready for the West Virginia Derby and woke up the middle of the night with excruciating pain,” Steward said from his home Wednesday night. “Then I had to have emergency surgery for a kidney stone. Everything’s done now though, they had a stent in there but that’s out now. I’m feeling better and hopefully Friday I’ll be coming up for the Test for Saturday.” 20 SHINE AGAIN STAKES RECAP Unbridled Forever got up in the final strides under John Velazquez to win the 7-furlong Shine Again by a neck over Stonetastic. Stewart watched the race from home, where he’s been since the surgery last Thursday. “Man, she ran great,” Stewart said. “She’s just a class horse. Johnny gave her a great ride, a class filly got a class ride. She just got up but she beat a nice bunch of fillies and what, she hadn’t run in eight months, nine months?” More than nine months actually. Unbridled Forever was last seen finishing fifth, beaten only 6 lengths for the win by eventual champion Untapable, in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff Oct. 31 at Santa Anita Park. The Distaff was the eighth start of 2014 for Chuck Fipke’s homebred daughter of Unbridled’s Song and she’d earned a break before her connections charted out a 4-year-old campaign. The break turned into an extended period away The Saratoga Special Dave Harmon from the track when Unbridled Forever suffered a bout of colic in January. She didn’t require surgery, but needed additional time off to recover and get back to normal before Stewart could get her back in training. “We did have a little trouble keeping weight on her so we gave her some time after the Breeders’ Cup,” Stewart said. “Then she colicked on us, so that was another few months. She colicked pretty good. She didn’t have a surgery or anything, but we had to get the weight back on her again.” Unbridled Forever spent some of her recovery time at WinStar Farm in Versailles, Ky., where most of Stewart’s horses go in between downtime at the farm and the racetrack. She put sufficient weight back by the spring and started to show signs she was ready to resume her career that saw her compete in eight straight stakes races after breaking her maiden in late November 2013 at Churchill Downs. She won the Silverbulletday in her 3-year-old deSee SHINE AGAIN page 21 Thursday, August 6, 2015 Shine Again – Continued from page 20 but and was on the Kentucky Oaks trail. She finished third in the Oaks, and also was third in the Fair Grounds Oaks and Acorn, and second in Saratoga’s Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks and Indiana Downs’ Grade 2 Indiana Oaks. Unbridled Forever came back to Stewart in what he called “great shape” from WinStar. She was too late for the spring stakes for older fillies and mares at Keeneland and Churchill, but with plenty of time to get ready for Saratoga. “She was actually ready to run a good 30 days ago but I just ran out of places to run her,” Stewart said. The Shine Again looked like a logical spot, even though it was at 7 furlongs and Unbridled Forever hadn’t sprinted since her maiden victory. She’s placed in Grade 1 stakes though, something none of the other 10 fillies and mares in the Shine Again did in their careers. Despite that class edge, Unbridled Forever was let go as the third choice at more than 7-2 behind last year’s Grade 2 Prioress winner Stonetastic and Wavell Avenue. Stonetastic did what most expected her to do and took the initiative from the start. The Mizzen Mast filly was also coming off a lengthy layoff, having been unraced since the Grade 1 La Brea the day after Christmas at Santa Anita. She set a strong pace under Paco Lopez, clicking off splits of :22.51 and :45.44. Unbridled Forever raced toward the back of the pack and right near Wavell Avenue up the backstretch. “The horse of Rosario’s (Wavell Avenue) in front of me kept going in and out and I didn’t know which way she was going to go, so finally at the quarter pole I made the decision to come out,” Velazquez said. “As soon as I came out she got another gear and started running well.” Unbridled Forever still had plenty to do in the lane with Stonetastic fending off her closest pursuers Taketheodds, Flattering Bea and Wavell Avenue, who tracked her around the turn. Stonetastic and Paco Lopez were 3 lengths in front with a furlong to run but Unbridled Forever started to roll as Velazquez drove her to daylight. Stonetastic got tired in the lane, drifted out a bit but didn’t impede Unbridled Forever and couldn’t hold off the winner. “We’re happy with her,” said Kelly Breen, who trains Stonetastic for Stoneway Farm. “There’s not too much to say. You saw what happened. She had every right to get a little tired first race back in eight months.” Taketheodds was 4 3/4 lengths back in third. Unbridled Forever’s winning time was 1:22.90, quick but not as fast as the 1:21.91 she clocked for her maiden win. “I never rode her before at this distance, the only time I rode her was against that really tough competition Saratoga Leaders JOCKEYS....................... 1ST John Velazquez........................ 18 Javier Castellano...................... 15 Irad Ortiz, Jr............................. 11 Jose Ortiz................................... 9 Jose Lezcano............................. 9 Luis Saez.................................... 8 going two turns,” Velazquez said. “She might be better at going longer. I don’t know that she wanted this race today going seven-eighths, but it was not the same quality of horses I ran against last time so that’s probably why she got up there today.” Stewart, who hopes to leave Louisville Friday and get back to Saratoga in time to run another Fipke homebred, Pleasant Tales, in the Grade 1 Test. He’ll take a look at the Grade 1 Personal Ensign on the Travers undercard Aug. 29 for Unbridled Forever “Hopefully it’s not too quick,” Stewart said. “If not there then we’ll probably have to look at something at Belmont.” TRAINERS...................... 1ST Todd Pletcher........................... 16 Bill Mott..................................... 7 Chad Brown .............................. 7 Christophe Clement.................... 5 Shug McGaughey....................... 3 Kiaran McLaughlin..................... 3 David Jacobson.......................... 3 Through Wednesday Join us for an evening of fine dining, specialty cocktails and an auction of stallion seasons and unique experiences featuring Food Network star Anne Burrell. DON’T GET LEFT BEHIND WHEN IT COMES TO LEGAL ADVICE The Foods of anne burrell Sunday, August 9, 2015 • 6:30 p.m. Canfield Casino • Saratoga Springs In support of the Vodka Infusion Bar by Tito’s Handmade Vodka & the stylings of the New York Players Sponsorships available • Tickets $375 each To purchase tickets visit www.trfinc.org/event/the-foods-of-anne-burrell Todd S. Engel Equine Lawyer Saratoga Springs office at 120 West Avenue (518) 882-8633 tengel@engelatty.com www.nyhorselawyer.com Thursday, August 6, 2015 In support of the The Saratoga Special 21 74 BEEKMAN ST. YOICKSONLINE.COM SPORTING ART ANTIQUES Dave Harmon Eventual winner Gimme Five leads a crowd in mid-pack early in Wednesday’s opener. New face, nice win Gimme Five successful in U.S. debut for Naylor ® 22 Ronnie Raymond took one look at Gimme Five and picked up a brush. “Hey, he’s Little White Face, I’m going to rub on him and see what happens,” Raymond, a groom for trainer Cyril Murphy, said back in June. Well, looked what happened. Gimme Five, imported from England this summer, won his American debut with a polished score against six rivals in Wednesday’s opener, an optional claimer over hurdles. Gimme Five won’t ever replace Address Unknown, the original White Face. Address Unknown won three of four starts over hurdles, including the William Entenmann Novice Stakes at Belmont Park in October. The son of Oasis Dream was put down after a paddock accident this spring. Gimme Five has a big white face like Address Unknown and emulated his namesake with an American debut win. Rated comfortably in mid-pack by Jack Doyle, the son of Champs Elysees rallied after the last hurdle to run down The Saratoga Special WEDNESDAY RACING RECAP Sporty and Northern Bay. Owned by Irv Naylor, Gimme Five drew off to win by a length, finishing 2 1/16 miles in 3:53.54. “That was the biggest disappointment for us, he’s as close to him as we can get, at least looks-wise,” Murphy said of losing Address Unknown. “Ronnie lived and died by the big horse from the time he arrived. When this fellow came in, he was his horse.” Gimme Five made six starts over hurdles in England for Alan King, collecting two wins in 3-year-old hurdle races last year. Consigned to the Doncaster May Sale, Naylor purchased him for 18,000 pounds. “As soon as he walked in I thought, he’s small but he’s well put together, he’s got some bone to him and the demeanor day in day out is what you saw in the paddock. He’s nonchalant, nothing bothers him, he goes out, does his work, comes back and eats his dinner,” Murphy said. “Looking at the entries, I thought, ‘Jeez, this is a See WEDNESDAY page 24 Thursday, August 6, 2015 Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 23 Wednesday – Continued from page 22 tough spot to start out,’ but he’s been schooling away, working really well, he was ready to go, we had to start somewhere.” Doyle, re-igniting his 40-plus win percentage on the year loved his reunion. “I actually schooled him as a baby at Alan King’s, it probably wasn’t great form over there but juvenile hurdle form is hard to work out. This ground, sharp track like this suited him,” Doyle said. “I was always going as quick as I could but I knew, being from England, that he would stay, it took him a couple of hurdles around here to get the hang of jumping at that speed, but once he did he was brilliant.” – Sean Clancy • When 7-1 shot David Rocks led gate to wire in the finale, the victory carried with it much more than the winner’s share of the $32,000 purse. The win brought owner Roddy Valente together in the winner’s circle with his family. “He’s named after my grandson David,” an elated Valente said as David celebrated nearby. “He’s my good luck charm. It’s good for the kids. It’s the best. When you can share this with your family and your grandkids, it’s what the game is all about at any level.” Valente named a racehorse after all of his grandchildren, and each carries a special meaning. In addition to David Rocks, whom Valente co-owns with Tom Lemme, Valente has Lulu Rocks and Eye Love Michael. “I told them all, ‘you’re all getting one name,’ so we have Lulu after my granddaughter. She’s a multiple winner. And I have one for my youngest grandson. He had eye cancer last year at this time and I named the horse E-Y-E Love Michael. He’s down in Belmont. He’s training. But we’re blessed. He beat his cancer. The tumors are gone in his eyes, so that’s the most important thing.” – Brandon Valvo • Javier Castellano enjoyed a blockbuster day Wednesday, winning four of the nine flat races on Wednesday’s card. Castellano twice won backSee WEDNESDAY page 26 embrace The Style. The Horse Racing Lifestyle® beckons the bold with a style and spirit all its own. EMBRACE THE RACE® is proud to provide The Apparel for the Horse Racing Lifestyle® for enthusiasts the world around. Live it. Wear it. Share it. Available at National Museum of Racing, EMBRACE THE RACE® Boutique (located at 12 Circular Street in downtown Saratoga Springs — just off Broadway across from the Holiday Inn and Historic Congress Park) and other fine retailers. www.embracetherace.com or call 518 580 4500 The Apparel for the Horse Racing Lifestyle 24 ® David Rocks pulls away late in Wednesday’s finale. The Saratoga Special Dave Harmon Thursday, August 6, 2015 Dave Harmon Decent (10) gives Javier Castellano the second of his four wins Wednesday. Success is a Journey Crupi’s New Castle Farm Six-furlong track · Starting gate · Cold saltwater spa Turnout paddocks · All levels of training James Crupi · info@newcastlefarm.com (352) 427-1600 · (352) 840-5400 · (866) 313-5400 Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 25 Wednesday – Kenneally claimed Decent for $40,000 out of a 7-furlong turf race June 24 at Belmont Park by Halcraft Stable. His win Wednesday was at 5 ½ furlongs on the turf. “I thought 7 furlongs was a little far last time so this distance looked like it would suit him a bit better,” Kenneally said. – Billy Blake Continued from page 24 to-back races, taking the fourth on Send It In for Todd Pletcher and the fifth on Decent for Eddie Kenneally and then the seventh on Excuse My French and eighth on Granny Mc’s Kitten for Chad Brown. “It’s excellent. I mean, it’s a great, great day here in Saratoga,” said Castellano, who trails John Velazquez in the rider standings 18-15. “It’s tough. It’s very competitive. I’m very proud to be one to ride with the best jockeys in the country like John Velazquez and the other top jockeys. I’m very satisfied that we had a good day today. Everything fell in the right place at the right time. “Don’t get me wrong, a lot of trainers give me opportunities to ride their horses and just the timing. You Got Winged (left) rallies to the front in Wednesday’s third race. need the timing and the patience and cent charged home to take the fifth. Making his first it pays off.” start for Kenneally off the claim, the 3-year-old War – Brandon Valvo Front gelding sat just off pacesetting On A Star be• Eddie Kenneally’s activity was limited the first fore taking the lead inside the eighth pole. “We haven’t run too many horses here,” Ken10 days of the meet – he sent out only three starters – and he won his first of the season when De- neally said. “But we’ll take it.” Epona Racing Stable • Got Winged broke from the rail in the third and wound up widest of all en route to victory in the 5 ½-furlong maiden claimer on the grass. The 3-year-old son of Posse made his debut on the Saratoga turf last summer, finishing fourth in a maiden special weight race at the same distance. Got Winged was winless in eight subsequent starts on the dirt before trainer Michael Dini put him back Dave Harmon on the turf. “He really wasn’t bred for the turf, and he was running good on the dirt,” Dini said. “He was a little sick and missed a race.” Dini will try to improve 2-for-2 on the meet when he sends out Gallery in today’s Quick Call Stakes. – Billy Blake Interested in owning a piece of the action? Join Saratoga’s own Epona Racing Stable. With 12 wins, Epona Racing Stable was among NYRA’s top 20 owners in 2014. Affordable partnership opportunities (starting at $2,000) available in NY-bred 2-year-olds by Freud, Indygo Shiner, Midnight Lute and Posse. No mark-ups. No monthly maintenance fees. Just plain fun! Contact Managing Partner Brian Culnan (518) 852-6426 or hccrusader89@gmail.com www.eponaracingstable.com YOUR 1/4% IS 100% APPRECIATED Epona made the 2014 Saratoga winner’s circle with Island Candy. (Tod Marks photo) You can help horse racing by contributing to the NTRA ¼% Check-off program when you buy or sell horses at any major domestic sale company. Your participation, and that of your peers, funds the NTRA’s federal legislative effort for horse racing on Capitol Hill. Join other industry members from 13 countries and over 40 states who supported the ¼% Check-off program last year by giving $2.50 for every $1,000 in a horse’s sale price. For more information, contact Joe Bacigalupo, NTRA director of government relations and membership development, at joeb@NTRA.com or 859-422-2677. www.SupportHorseRacing.org Proud Supporters of the NTRA Legislative Team 2615-290-093 LAC 1-4 100 SaratogaSpecial_9.5x2.375.indd 1 The Saratoga Special 8/5/15 AM Thursday, August 6,8:04 2015 9 Award-Winning Performances! Saturday, October 10, 2015 Post Time 7:05 PM Featuring the West Virginia Breeders Classic And the Breeders Classics Races TV Coverage on Fox Sports Network, Comcast Mid-Atlantic & HRTV West Virginia Breeders Classics, Ltd. wvbcmbn@verizon.net • www.wvbc.com P.O. Box 1251 • Charles Town,WV 25414 • 304-725-0709 SAM HUFF - CEO • CAROL HOLDEN - PRES. • THERESA BITNER - EXEC. SEC. Saratoga’s Best Bets Things to do, places to go, businesses to call... “NOBODY HAS WRITTEN ABOUT RACEHORSES as beautifully and evocatively as Lyn Lifshin.” Lyrical Ballad Bookstore Antiquarian Booksellers 7-9 Phila Street 518-584-8779 lyricalballadbooks.com More than 100,000 books and old prints all sound and ready. “Troy Mulligan saves me hours of work and days of worry. Now, I can watch the horses again.” Specializing in books on the history of Thoroughbred racing and breeding. Troy H. Mulligan, CPA – Sean Clancy, Riverdee Stable Lexington, KY tmulligan@radwanbrown.com • (859) 233-4146 Barbaro: Beyond Brokenness, The Licorice Daughter: My Year with Ruffian, and Secretariat: The Red Freak, The Miracle. All on www.amazon.com & Texas A&M University Press: 1-800-826-8911 Put YOUR business here! Deep Penetrating Electro-Magnetic Therapy for Joints, Muscles, and Overall Well Being Angela Cornes · (502) 558-6993 · CircularWellness.com Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special Just $800 for the ENTIRE SARATOGA SEASON! Email joe@thisishorseracing.com for more information. 27 SARATOGA RESULTS Wednesday August 5. FIRST $65,000, AOC $30,000, 4 YO’S & UP, 2 1/16M 7 Gimme Five (GB) J. Doyle $7.50 $4.60 $3.70 3 Sporty D. Nagle $6.40 $4.10 6 Northern Bay R. Geraghty $5.50 B Gelding 2011, by Champs Elysees (GB) - Waitingonacloud (GB) by In the Wings (GB). Owner: Naylor, Irvin, S.. Trainer: Cyril Murphy. Breeder: Granham Farm Partnership (GB). Late Scratches: Manacor (IRE) Claimed: All Together claimed by Jacobson, David for $30,000 Time: 3:53.54 Exacta (7-3), $46.00; Superfecta (7-3-6-5), $794.00; Trifecta (7-3-6), $342.00 SECOND $25,000, CLAIMING $12,500, 3 YO’S & UP, 1 1/8M 1A Wealth to Me C. Velasquez $3.60 $2.60 $2.30 3 My Adonis J. Ortiz $8.80 $5.20 5 Petrocelli J. Rosario $4.50 Gr/ro Gelding 2007, by Tapit - Wealthy Belongings by Belong to Me Owner: Drawing Away Stable & Jacobson, David. Trainer: David Jacobson. Breeder: Robert & Vickie Mondun (KY). Late Scratches: Bedouin Now. Time: 1:51.34 Claimed: Wealth to Me claimed by Shaw, Martin for $12,500, Playing a Joke claimed by Ramsey, Kenneth L. and Sarah K. for $12,500, Grandpa Len claimed by Zito, Louis for $12,500 Daily Double (7-1), $25.00; Exacta (1-3), $33.60; Quinella (1-3), $21.00; Superfecta (1-3-5-4), $473.50; Trifecta (1-3-5), $115.00; Consolation Double (7-6), $9.00 THIRD $45,000, NY-BRED MAIDEN CLM $40,000, 3&UP, 5 1/2F 1 Got Winged J. Lezcano $17.40 $7.50 $4.30 3 River Knight S. Bridgmohan $4.00 $2.70 2 Wind Warning C. Velasquez $2.70 B Colt 2012, by Posse - Just Call Me Angel by Devil’s Bag Owner: Ballybrit Stable, LLC. Trainer: Michael Dini. Breeder: Very Un Stable (NY). Late Scratches: Remote Access, Rich Dalone, Norm the Giant. Time: 1:03.55 Daily Double (1-1), $39.60; Exacta (1-3), $55.50; Superfecta (1-3-26), $1,032.00; Trifecta (1-3-2), $143.00; Pic 3 (7-1-1), $186.00; (76-1), $70.50 FOURTH $73,000, NY-BRED MDN SPECIAL WEIGHT, 3&UP, 1 1/8M 4 Send It In J. Castellano $6.30 $3.00 $2.20 2 Super Psyche J. Alvarado $4.70 $3.00 5 Overawe I. Ortiz, Jr. $2.40 B Gelding 2012, by Big Brown - Sharp Instinct by Awesome Again Owner: Pompa, Jr., Paul, P.. Trainer: Todd Pletcher. Breeder: Paul Pompa Jr. (NY). Late Scratches: Tommaso, Chief of State. Time: 1:51.90 Daily Double (1-4), $51.00; Exacta (4-2), $26.60; Quinella (2-4), $14.60; Superfecta (4-2-5-1), $222.00; Trifecta (4-2-5), $61.50; Pic 3 (1-1-4), $138.50 FIFTH $47,000, CLAIMING $40,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 5 1/2F 10 Decent J. Castellano $9.00 $5.10 $4.00 8 Eighty Three R. Hernandez $4.80 $3.50 12 On a Star J. Velazquez $6.30 Dk B/ Br Gelding 2012, by War Front - Just by Awesome Again Owner: Halcraft Stable LLC. Trainer: Eddie Kenneally. Breeder: Claiborne Farm & Adele B. Dilschneider (KY). Late Scratches: Deputy Busterstone, Out of Your Mind, Sidearm Claimed: Eighty Three claimed by Final Turn Racing Stables, LLC for $40,000, One Eyed Ray claimed by Ramsey, Kenneth L. and Sarah K. for $40,000, Triple Play claimed by Rice, Linda for $40,000 Time: 1:02.05 Daily Double (4-10), $24.80; Exacta (10-8), $44.40; Superfecta (10-812-6), $1,932.00; Trifecta (10-8-12), $384.50; Pic 3 (1-4-10), $259.00 28 The Saratoga Special SIXTH $67,000, CLAIMING $50,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 1M 5 Abtaal L. Saez $8.50 $3.90 $3.50 1 Honor the Kitten J. Castellano $4.60 $3.10 3 Bowman’s Beast P. Hernandez Ortega $5.50 B Horse 2009, by Rock Hard Ten - Appealing Storm by Valid Appeal Owner: Shadwell Stable. Trainer: Kiaran McLaughlin. Breeder: Lothenbach Stables Inc (KY). Time: 1:35.91 Late Scratches: Seve, Finding Candy, Street Shark Claimed: Abtaal claimed by Grady, Brad for $50,000, Rapscallion claimed by Final Turn Racing Stables, LLC for $50,000, Bigger Picture claimed by Dubb, Michael for $50,000 Daily Double (10-5), $45.40; Exacta (5-1), $37.00; Superfecta (5-13-11), $2,554.00; Trifecta (5-1-3), $347.00; Pic 3 (4-10-5), $136.00; Pic 4 (1-4-10-2/5/8/10), $1,192.00; Pic 5 (1/6-1-4-10-2/5/8/10), $3,042.00 SEVENTH $83,000, MAIDEN SPECIAL WEIGHT, 3 YO’S & UP, 6F 2 Excuse My French J. Castellano $7.70 $4.40 $2.90 3 Vacation Spot J. Rosario $12.40 $6.20 6 Bird Sense L. Saez $3.90 B Filly 2012, by Line of David - Summer Star by Siberian Summer Owner: Spendthrift Farm LLC. Trainer: Chad Brown. Breeder: Spendthrift Farm, LLC (ON). Time: 1:11.34 Late Scratches: Where’s Poppa, Zealous Wildcat Daily Double (5-2), $36.20; Exacta (2-3), $87.50; Superfecta (2-3-64), $2,244.00; Trifecta (2-3-6), $475.50; Consolation Double (5-8), $6.30; Pic 3 (10-5-2), $234.00; (10-5-8), $40.60 EIGHTH $93,000, AOC $80,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 1 1/16M 4 Granny Mc’s Kitten J. Castellano $8.10 $3.90 $2.70 8 Crisolles (FR) J. Leparoux $4.00 $3.20 5 Patsy’s Holiday L. Saez $3.40 B Filly 2011, by Kitten’s Joy - Granny Franny by Grand Slam Owner: Kenneth L. and Sarah K. Ramsey. Trainer: Chad Brown. Breeder: Kenneth L. Ramsey & Sarah K. Ramsey (KY). Late Scratches: Holiday’s Jewel. Time: 1:42.23 Daily Double (2-4), $35.40; Exacta (4-8), $32.00; Superfecta (4-8-510), $652.00; Trifecta (4-8-5), $126.00; Pic 3 (5-2-4), $194.50; (5-84), $32.40 NINTH $100,000, STAKES - SHINE AGAIN S., 4 YO’S & UP, 7F 5 Unbridled Forever J. Velazquez $9.30 $4.20 $3.60 3 Stonetastic P. Lopez $4.00 $3.60 10 Taketheodds J. Leparoux $13.00 B Filly 2011, by Unbridled’s Song - Lemons Forever by Lemon Drop Kid. Owner: Fipke, Charles, E.. Trainer: Dallas Stewart. Breeder: Charles Fipke (KY). Time: 1:22.90 Daily Double (4-5), $42.80; Exacta (5-3), $37.80; Superfecta (5-310-6), $5,299.00; Trifecta (5-3-10), $866.00; Pic 3 (2-4-5), $171.50; Place Pix Nine (1/3/5-2/3/6-4/5/8-5), $40.80 TENTH $32,000, CLAIMING $16,000, 3 YO’S & UP, 6F 7 David Rocks K. Carmouche $17.40 $7.50 $4.60 6 Aleander E. Trujillo $4.60 $3.20 11 Who’s Z Daddy R. Silvera $2.90 Ch Gelding 2012, by Bustin Stones - Laurie Hope by Swamp King Owner: Valente, Roddy J. and Lemme, Thomas. Trainer: Bruce Levine. Breeder: R. J. Valente (NY). Time: 1:10.89 Claimed: Richiebythelinks claimed by Jacobson, David for $16,000 Daily Double (5-7), $77.00; Exacta (7-6), $73.50; Superfecta (7-6-1110), $1,137.00; Trifecta (7-6-11), $378.50; Pic 3 (4-5-7), $356.00; Pic 4 (2/8-4-5-7), $1,799.00; Pic 6 (10-2/5/8/10-2/8-4-5-7), $406.00; Pic 6 (10-2/5/8/10-2/8-4-5-7), $74,162.00 On Track Handle: 3,232,130. Inter-State Handle: 9,856,975 Copyright 2015 EQUIBASE Company LLC. All Rights Reserved. Thursday, August 6, 2015 SARATOGA RESULTS PHOTOS 1 BY DAVE HARMON 2 4 5 7 8 3 6 10 Bon s ble enture Sta aV Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 29 cupofcoffee BY SEAN CLANCY On May 16, 2006… Saddam Hussein refused to enter a plea to formal charges of crimes against humanity. Richard Hatch, the winner of the first Survivor Series, was sentenced to four years in prison for failing to pay taxes on his reality TV earnings. Barry Bonds chased Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron for the all-time home run title. President Bush said he would send 6,000 National Guard troops to help secure the Mexican border. Invasor approached his American debut. The Saratoga Special was three months away from beginning year six. And Jonathan Sheppard unveiled a firsttime starter in the fourth race at Delaware Park. Today, only Sheppard’s action holds any relevance. Ramon Dominguez took the call on a gawky chestnut gelding. Bettors sent them off at nearly 6-1 in the 5 ½-furlong maiden claimer, they didn’t threaten, finishing 10 lengths behind Ancient Fleet. Nine years later, Dominguez is retired, Ancient Fleet hasn’t been seen since finishing eighth in a $4,000 claimer at Penn National in 2008 and Divine Fortune is still going strong. He makes his sixth appearance in the A.P. Smithwick Memorial Steeplechase today. After his career debut, the long-striding, bigboned, head-high son of Royal Anthem and the Northern Fling mare My Tombola made two more starts on the flat before making his hurdle debut at Virginia Fall in October 2006. He lost his first four starts over hurdles, then won four of his next five, including a flat race at Colonial Downs, an allowance hurdle at Saratoga and a novice hurdle stakes at the Meadowlands. Yes, the Meadowlands. He was another burgeoning star for the high-octane barn. Then he went missing from November 3, 2007 to November 7, 2009. That’s 734 days if you’re counting. Stall rest, turn out, forgotten about, that’s kind Dirty Work Tod Marks Divine Fortune makes his 46th start. of the routine around Sheppard’s Pennsylvania farm when a horse bows a tendon or strains a suspensory. It happens. Nobody panics. Time heals all wounds. Divine Fortune proved he was healed, winning an allowance race over hurdles in April 2010 and returning to Saratoga three years after his debut here to win the Smithwick. Two starts and a year later, he won it again. A year later, he finished fifth in the Smithwick, then crashed at the last fence in the New York Turf Writers Cup. He bounced back. In 2013, he picked up a third-place check in the Smithwick. Last year, he pulled up in the Smithwick. And today, 44 starts after making his debut, Divine Fortune makes another hike up the mountain, taking on seven rivals – ranging from three to six years younger – in today’s $125,000 hurdle feature. It will be Divine Fortune’s sixth appearance in the Grade 1 stakes. Most likely, he won’t win – 2 1/6-miles seem too sharp for him these days – but that’s OK, he owes us nothing. As recently as November, Divine Fortune turned back the clock with a flawless performance in the Colonial Cup. They say dance like nobody’s watching, that day, Divine Fortune jumped like nobody was watching, lengthening his stride as he approached the wings and lifting off. Horsemen and fans, with nothing to do with him, gasped for split seconds every time he launched. It was a work of art, in a tornado. Divine Fortune skipped across the line, 9 lengths clear of Demonstrative, who had drubbed him three straight times leading up to the Colonial Cup. I walked away that day, awed by Divine Fortune’s performance and what he’s taught us over the years. Resiliency. He lost his first 14 attempts in Grade 1 stakes, finally breaking out with a win in the 2013 Grand National. How many horses start in 14 Grade 1 stakes? Divine Fortune lost his first 14 tilts at the ultimate prize. When he finally won his Grade 1, at age 10, the sport stopped and saluted. Forgiveness. He’s fallen twice and lost his jockey once. When you jump with panache, sometimes you fall with panache. His falls are dramatic, then he gets up, shakes it off like he was in a charity dunk tank and comes back again, jumping like he’d never fallen. His defeats can look humbling, then he walks home, regroups and comes back swinging for more. Respect. Every time, a rival trainer beats him, they walk toward the winner’s circle in awe of what he had done ahead of their horse. See, Divine Fortune does the dirty work, day after day, race after race, he’s in front, running free, going a tick faster than even he should. Enjoyment. Watching Divine Fortune train Wednesday morning, it’s hard to know who’s enjoying it more, the horse, the trainer, the exercise rider or the writer. He glided, high-stepping, like he was let out for recess. Today, Divine Fortune lines up for his 46th career start – nine years, two months and 22 days since his debut at Delaware Park. But, who’s counting? BROWN ADVISORY IS PROUD TO SUPPORT SARATOGA RACING BALTIMORE WASHINGTON NEW YORK BOSTON CHAPEL HILL LONDON WILMINGTON (800) 645-3923 www.brownadvisory.com 30 The Saratoga Special Thursday, August 6, 2015 KEENELAND SALES GRADUATES HAVE ALREADY WON 9 GRADED STAKES RACES AT SARATOGA CURALINA - CCA Oaks (G1) HARD NOT TO LIKE - Dianna Stakes (G1) HOLY BOSS - Amsterdam Stakes (G2) MRS MCDOUGAL - Lake George Stakes (G2) RED RIFLE - Bowling Green Handicap (G2) TEXAS RED - Jim Dandy Stakes (G2) OFF THE TRACKS - Schuylerville Stakes (G3) STOPCHARGINGMARIA - Shuvee Handicap (G3) UNCLE VINNY - Sanford Stakes (G3) KEENELAND SEPTEMBER YEARLING SALE · SEPTEMBER 14-26, 2015 Thursday, August 6, 2015 The Saratoga Special 31 JUMP RACING THE FIRST SECOND CAREER “I’ve got two stories to tell . . . I sold Flat Top for $5,000 because he wasn’t a very good horse on the flat. He won two Eclipse Awards and earned $500,000 as a steeplechaser. I was smart enough to keep Slip Away. He never ran on the flat, but was champion steeplechase horse of 2010 and made almost $400,000. Steeplechasing is a great second chance for a horse, a horse you might already own.” – LEADING OWNER/BREEDER KEN RAMSEY Your Thoroughbred can go jumping too. $6 million in purses • A new set of conditions Racing in 11 states • Superb owner hospitality gojumpracing.org A joint venture of the National Steeplechase Association and Foundation.