Posts Tagged ‘dolphus morrison’

PAULICK’S THOUGHTS FROM A TRIPLE CROWN NOTEBOOK

Monday, June 8th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
This was a Triple Crown for the little guys, and I’m not talking about jockeys.

We had a Kentucky Derby won by a 50-1 longshot, Mine That Bird, a gelding that once sold for $9,500 as a yearling. He was trained by Bennie L. "Chip" Woolley Jr.,  a black hat wearing cowboy from New Mexico who some years earlier befriended Mark Allen, one of Mine That Bird’s owners, in a bar fight. The trainer had saddled just one winner this year before the Derby. Anyone outside of New Mexico who knew him was probably a relative.

The Preakness was won by Rachel Alexandra, a filly bred by Dolphus Morrison, a retired businessman from Alabama with a modest breeding and racing operation. That’s right, Alabama, not exactly horse country. But it puts an addendum on the old adage that a good horse can come from anywhere. So can a good horse breeder, and Morrison has enjoyed success as a breeder even before Rachel Alexandra became a national star.

The Belmont winner, Summer Bird, was bred and owned by a couple from India who are retired medical professionals. Dr. Kalarikkal Jayaraman was a cardiologist and wife Vilasini was a pathologist who discovered a love of horse racing in Arkansas and eventually bought a farm in Ocala, Fla., where Kalarikkal Jayaraman trains the young horses before sending them to the racetrack. Summer Bird’s trainer, Tim Ice, is in his first year as a head trainer. His earliest memories of racing come from Waterford Park in West Virginia, a track that used to be the poster child for the leaky roof circuit until West Virginia got slot machines and the track was transformed into Mountaineer Park.

The only “spoiler” in the little guy Triple Crown was Jess Jackson, a billionaire winemaker from California who bought Rachel Alexandra from Morrison and a partner after her 20 ¼-length win in the Kentucky Oaks. Morrison is a traditionalist when it comes to racing, saying he didn’t think fillies belong in the Classic races, which he believes should be a showcase for future stallion prospects (that would seem to preclude geldings from running in them, too). But Morrison is also a capitalist, and was willing to sell his prized filly for the right price.

Jackson, despite his many years as a racing fan (as a young child he saw Seabiscuit run in Northern California), is not a traditionalist. He likes to see the best run against the best, especially if he has a stake in the outcome. He swooped in to Baltimore and won the Preakness with Rachel Alexandra, then exited center stage with the Medaglia d’Oro filly. Where or when she’ll resurface is anyone’s guess, but let’s hope it brings on the same dramatics as the Preakness.

Among the beaten in this Triple Crown were Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed, who in addition to being a leading buyer at virtually every major sale throughout the world, purchased the top two 2-year-old colts in training in North America last year, Eclipse Award winner Midshipman and runner-up Vineyard Haven (shouldn’t Jess Jackson have bought a horse with that kind of name?). The sheikh, for reasons of pride, insists on training his horses in Dubai each winter and dispersing them to major races like the Kentucky Derby, a program that hasn’t yet been very successful. To Kentucky he came, he saw, he failed to conquer.

Triple Crown training king D. Wayne Lukas failed to hit the board in the three Triple Crown races, but it was good to have him back on the beat after a drought. Bob Baffert came to Churchill Downs in search of his fourth Kentucky Derby win with a live contender, Pioneerof the Nile, but after finishing a distant second behind Mine That Bird was left repeating the line from the movie “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby”: “If you ain’t first, you’re last.” And Nick Zito, who talks of Triple Crown glory in almost Biblical terms, made appearances in the Derby and Belmont, but couldn’t muster much of a run in either race. These three Hall of Famers help make the classic races something special.

Then there is Todd Pletcher, a future Hall of Famer and multi-Eclipse Award winning-training who seems to be followed by a dark cloud whenever he comes to Churchill Downs in the springtime. Pletcher started three in this year’s Derby, failing to hit the board with any of them, and is now 0-for-24 in America’s most famous horse race. Hang in there, Todd. As a Chicago Cubs fan who was not around for their last World Series championship in 1908, I feel your pain. Cub fans have an expression that might work for you, too: Wait till next year.

Some additional thoughts from a Triple Crown notebook:
- Major stakes at Oaklawn Park produced two Triple Crown race winners, Rachel Alexandra, who won the Grade 2 Fantasy Stakes as her final prep before the Kentucky Oaks, and Summer Bird, who was third behind Papa Clem and Old Fashioned in the Grade 2 Arkansas Derby. It is amazing to many people (except for those on the Graded Stakes Committee) that the Arkansas Derby remains a Grade 2 race after producing Triple Crown races winners like Smarty Jones, Afleet Alex, Curlin and now Summer Bird in recent years.

- Sunland Park races deserve closer examination in the grading process as well. Mine That Bird came to Kentucky after two races at the New Mexico track: second in the Borderland Derby and fourth in the Sunland Derby. Gabby’s Golden Gal, winner of Saturday’s Grade 1 Acorn on the Belmont undercard, won the Sunland Park Oaks. No Sunland Park races have ever been graded by the committee, but since the addition of slot machine revenue they have dramatically increased purses and improved the quality of runners the races attract.

- Breeders should be excited about the emergence of two young Kentucky-based sires, Birdstone and Medaglia d’Oro, whose first crop of foals are now aged three. Birdstone, who upset Smarty Jones in his Triple Crown bid at the 2004 Belmont and also won the Champagne and Travers, sired Mine That Bird and Summer Bird. He stands at the Beck family’s Gainesway Farm. Medaglia d’Oro, a top racehorse over several seasons who finished a close second to longshot Sarava in the 2002 Belmont before winning the Jim Dandy and Travers, sired Rachel Alexandra. Medaglia d’Oro, who started his career at John Sikura’s Hill ‘n’ Dale, then moved to the Haisfield family’s Stonewall Stallions, was the subject of a recent bidding war involving several stallion farms, with Sheikh Mohammed’s Darley emerging last week as the winner.

- “Practice? We’re talking about practice.” Did Calvin Borel move too soon in the Belmont aboard Mine That Bird? Would some practice runs on the mile-and-a-half Belmont oval in preliminary races on Belmont Day or earlier in the week have benefited the lovable Cajun, who shrugged off his lack of experience at Belmont Park as not important while boldly guaranteeing victory for Mine That Bird? Borel became a media darling during this year’s Triple Crown, which he nearly swept on two horses. He jetted to California for the “Tonight Show With Jay Leno,” made an appearance on “Late Night With David Letterman,” was a hit during a Triple Crown luncheon and never seemed to stop talking. He did everything but ride during the week of the Belmont. But if someone had asked Calvin about practicing over the Belmont Park strip before the race, is it possible he would have said something like this?

- Business on the Triple Crown was strong in light of the poor economy. Betting on the Derby was down, not surprisingly. The morning line favorite, I Want Revenge, was scratched and wet track conditions such as those horseplayers found on Derby Day generally lead to wagering declines. Preakness betting was up significantly from 2008, though attendance took a huge hit when Magna officials changed their policy and prohibited fans from bringing their own beer into the infield. The Belmont, whose numbers boom when there is a Triple Crown on the line, did not have that advantage this year, but did well in comparison to the last non-Triple Crown year, 2007. Adding to the good news was increased television ratings for the Derby and Preakness on NBC. ABC’s Belmont Stakes telecast will almost certainly have a smaller audience than in 2008, when Big Brown was going for a Triple Crown.

How much handle from the Triple Crown is leaking to offshore bookmakers offering online wagering is anyone’s guess. These businesses do not have contracts with racetracks or horsemen’s organizations, and pay nothing to support the game. It’s beyond me why anyone who cares about horse racing would do business with these sites or  (whether they are established publications, web sites, or fan blogs) accept advertising from them. They are aggressive in seeking places to advertise, and are willing to pay top dollar to market their products. Again, they put nothing back into the game. The Paulick Report refuses to accept advertising from these businesses and applauds all the other web sites and publications who have a similar policy.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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LIVE BLOGGING KENTUCKY OAKS DAY

Friday, May 1st, 2009

By Ray Paulick

Click here to link to Kentucky Oaks day charts.

So many questions about today’s Kentucky Oaks program. Will Rachel Alexandra continue to dominate her division without breaking a sweat in the Oaks? Who will benefit from the scratch due to the wet track conditions of champion Zenyatta in the Louisville Stakes? How will the track (labeled sloppy early in the card) affect the day’s racing? And why on earth is HRTV’s Carolyn Conley wearing a potted plant on her head?

I hope to have those answers and more as I live blog the 12-race marathon Kentucky Oaks day program from Churchill Downs. I’ll be back shortly after 1 p.m. (Eastern) to cover the rich stakes program, culminating with the Kentucky Oaks.

1:10 p.m. … Well, we have a muddy, sealed racetrack for the Oaks card, which means the track superintendant rolled it tight to keep as much moisture from seeping in to the surface as possible. What often happens with a sealed track are speed biases early in the day and a more tiring track as the day wears on–provided there’s not a lot more rain that falls. Times can vary, but I’ve seen sealed racetracks rated sloppy that were faster than a dry and fast racing strip.

The early races yielded slow fractional times, with the winners either racing on the early lead or pressing the pace. The first race, a 1 1/16-mile allowance race, was won by Luna Vega and Shaun Bridgomohan, coming from just off the pace (fractions were creepy crawly :26.11, :51.23, :1:15.45, 1:39.30 and a final time of 1:45.64).Susies Gal, the early leader, finished second. 

The second race, a starter allowance, was won by pace-presser Multipass, who drew off from Lokomamma to win by four under Julien Leparoux (fractions were quicker, :23.93, :46.83, 1:24.65 and a final time for the mile of 1:38.12). The speed in the race, Lost Village fell back to last.

In the third, the A.P. Indy filly On a Roll broke her maiden under Rafael Bejarano going wire to wire to win by a half-length while setting moderate fractions of :24.11, :48.34, 1:13.60 and 1:40.29 en route to a final clocking for 1 1/16 miles of 1:47.27.

1:22 p.m. … Here’s a news flash. Friesan Fire is the early betting favorite for the Kentucky Derby at 4-1, with morning line favorite I Want Revenge second choice at 5-1, Pioneerof the Nile and (get this) General Quarters co-third choices at 8-1, and Dunkirk and Chocolate Candy next at 9-1 each. The Louisville bettors are obviously smitten by the Tom McCarthy saga, the story of the former hometown school teacher and principal with a horse stable and a Derby dream. I’m guessing the early play on Friesan Fire is based on his superior off-track form in the Louisiana Derby.

1:25 p.m. … Stlil catching up on the early part of the card. Senor Fuego charged from far off the pace to take the fourth race, a maiden sprint, but the fast  fractions set by Mighty Score (under that great judge of pace, Stewart Elliott) set it up for the John Velazquez ridden, Todd Pletcher-trained first-time starter by Speightstown. The fractions were :21.45, :44.96, and :57.76 en route to a six-furlong clocking of 1:11.03. 

1:35 p.m. … What happened to the racetrack after the third? All of a sudden, the fractions are ultra-fast.  Calvin Borel rallied up the rail from last place to win the fifth under Warrior’s Reward, closing fast under fractions of :21.93, :44.10 and 1:08.92 to beat the Grade 1-placed Munnings in 1:21.60 for seven furlongs, just 1 1/5 seconds off the track record. Fufty Too set the pace at 17-1 and beat just one horse.

1:55 p.m. … Apparently track superintendent Butch Lehr "opened up" the track after the third race, which allowed it to dry out and apparently quickened the track up almost immediately. As the day goes on, however, the track could become sticky and tiring, one horsemen told me. He also said the rail has been the ideal place to be so far, and that might not change.

One word of caution about track biases. Jockeys see horses winning on the lead, and all of sudden several of them will  gun for the front. That leads to faster fractions and completely different pace scenario, resulting in more winners coming from off the pace. Biases may not always  be what they seem.

2:00 p.m. … This isn’t Kentucky Oaks related, but until we get a chance to post it elsewhere, I thought I would pass on word that stewards at Delaware Park have decided to scratch the two horses formerly owned by Paraneck Stable, the operation run by Ernie Paragallo, that were entered to race on Monday in the name of Nob Hill Stable. Paraneck’s horses have been banned from racing in New York until a new authorized agent has been approved by the New York State Racing and Wagering Board to replace Paragallo.

2:02 p.m. … Is there a method to Butch Lehr’s madness? After opening the main track for races four and five (the sixth, the Aegeon Turf Sprint was on grass),  he’s  floated it again, sealing it back up. Should we look for a frontrunner to win this next race, the 1 1/6-mile Louisville Stakes (the race from which Zenyatta scratched)?

2:05 p.m. … Catching up on the sixth race, the Aegon Turf Sprint went to course specialst Chamberlain Bridge,  a War Chant gelding winning for the third time in as many starts on the Churchill Downs turf.  Garrett Gomez rode for trainer Bret Calhoun. Cannonball finished second, with Smart Enough third. 

2:10 p.m. … Are we going to have an inquiry after Miss Isella and Calvin Borel bulled their way through a narrow opening on the rail and past unbeaten One Caroline to win the Louisville Stakes? She clearly leaned out and into One Caroline and Edgar Prado near the eighth pole. The two fillies appeared to bump solidly,  then Miss Isella drew off to win by three-quarters of a length on the same track on which she won the Fall City Handicap last fall. Ian Wilkes trains Miss Isella for Domino Stud of Lexington. One Caroline was losing for the first time in six starts for  G. Watts Humphrey Jr. and trainer Rusty Arnold.  Swift Temper finished third.

There was no inquiry.

"The other filly didn’t give me much of a fight. It looks like she fell to pieces," Borel said of One Caroline. "She hung in with me for six or seven strides  and  run out of horse. My filly loves this track, though, you couldn’t imagine. She just glides on it." The winner is a daughter of Silver Charm, who showed a lot of heart throughout his career, including the 1997 Kentucky Derby, which he won by a head. She was bred by her owners.

Borel, the regular rider of Oaks favorite Rachel Alexandra, said he thinks that filly will just love the track condition.

Miss Isella paid $19.40 after completing the mile in 1:36.68.  One Caroline went right to the front and set fractions of :23.96, :47.65 and 1:11.72 before being hooked first by Swift Temper on the turn for home and then by the winner.

3:10 p.m. … Last year’s 2-year-old filly champ Stardom Bound may be on the sidelines for now,  but IEAH Stables and their partners have another star filly on their hands in Laragh, who wired the field in the 1 1/16-mile Edgewood Stakes, the eighth race on the Oaks Day program. Ridden by Edgar Prado and trained by John Terranova, Laragh was never seriously threatened as she rolled to her fourth win in eight lifetime starts, winning by about 1 1/4 lengths over the fast-closing Magical Affair. Banker’s Choice was third. 

Laragh showed good early speed to get the lead, then relaxed beautifully, setting fractions of :23.57, :48.43, 1:13.04 and 1:37.32, with a final time of 1:43.88. Prado used the whip twice in deep stretch to keep Laragh’s mind on business. Laragh was coming off a fifth-place finish in the Grade 2 Comely at Aqueduct on a sloppy track, her worst career performance. She, along with Stardom Bound, is a gray daughter of Tapit, the Pulpit stallion standing at Gainesway Farm. Mike Ryan bred Laragh, who was produced from the El Prado mare, Rose of Summer.

3:30 p.m. … Scratch Justwhistledixie from the Kentucky Oaks…apparently a stone bruise that isn’t serious but enough to take her out of the race.

3:55 p.m. … Another rallying winner up the rail, as Bullsbay under Jeremy Rose got up in the final sixteenth of a mile to defeat Cool Coal Man in the Alysheba Stakes. The 5-year-old son of Tiznow was winning at Churchill Downs for the third time in as many starts for trainer Graham Motion. He covered the 1 1/16-miles in 1:44.29. Informed and Garrett Gomez set the early fractions (:24.55, :48.72, and 1:13.57) and was tackled by Cool Coal Man and John Velazquez on the turn for home. Cool Coal Man appeared headed to victory, but Rose shot up the rail after racing in mid-pack to the stretch and got the narrow victory. Cool Coal Man was second, with Star Guitar third and Informed fourth. The winner paid $8.40.

4:40 p.m. …. After a brief (if late)  lunch interlude, I realized that the 10th at Churchill Downs, the American Turf Handicap, may be the only good betting race left on the card. Rachel Alexandra will be 1-9 to win the Kentucky Oaks and the 12th race of the day, a maiden race scheduled on turf, has been scratched down to four horses as a main track event. Tough to make much money or "get out" under those conditions.

The American Turf has a field of nine 3-year-olds, with the rail horse, Stormalory, coming off a narrow win at Keeneland in the Transylvania Stakes, the 2-1 favorite. I think a better alternative in the race will be Battle of Hastings, trained by Jeff Mullins and going for his third win in a row after running poorly in his U.S. debut.  The Royal Applause gelding won two of five in England last year at 2. Skipadate, a Mark Casse-trained colt by Skip Away, took some early money in the wagering, perhaps because of the troubled trip he had in the Transylvania when lacking room at the three-eighths pole and going very wide into the stretch.

4:55 p.m. … The American Turf  was a "get out" race for whoever had the 45-1 shot Orthodox, who tracked the early pace of Turfiste, then grabbed the lead in the final furlong and held Battle of Hastings at bay to win by three-quarters of a length. Stormalory was pulled up on the backstretch of the 1 1/16-mile race.

The winner, a 3-year-old by Pulpit, was ridden by Jon Court and is trained by John Glenney. He was winning for the third time in nine starts and this was his first stakes victory. Jockey Tyler Baze had to fight to keep Battle of Hastings from lugging in down the stretch, compromising his chances after getting a good early trip in third position as Turfiste set fractions of :24.23, :48.86, and 1:13.86 for the opening six furlongs. Orthodox covered the distance in 1:44.17 after a mile split of 1:38.15. The turf course was rated good by Equibase.

We’ll try to get an update on Stormalory as soon as possible.

We’re going to see if we can the Bravo channel to watch the Kentucky Oaks, which it’s been rumored will be shown between features on lifestyles of the housewives of Jefferson County (Ky), reruns of Make Me a Supermodel, and the debut of I’m a Horseplayer: Get me Outta Here.

5:00 p.m. … Seems like a regular horse racing show for the first minute, with NBC’s Bob Costas setting the scene…then it’s on to the fashion….Nancy O’Dell wearing a silly hat and promising to tell us all about the fashion and food (hot dogs?) of Oaks Day. Then a quick shift to NBC’s Donna Brothers and Bethany Frankel (who seems like a perfectly awful person and is one of the Housewives of New York). Back to Nancy O’Dell again, this time with NBC’s Bob Neumier (nice pink tie, Bob!). Nancy O’Dell says she looks at the horse’s asses for her handicapping. Neumier seems rightly stunned.

I may have to switch back to HRTV.

5:05 p.m. … I’m a glutton for punishment. Bravo now has ex-footballer Tiki Barber (nice pink tie, Tiki!) interviewing a top chef (I guess that’s another Bravo show), who is explaining  how to make bread pudding…a racetrack staple if I ever heard of one. Goes down really well after a dog.

5:07 p.m. …  A serious note: the switch to Bravo was a good fit for this year’s Kentucky Oaks and the emphasis on breast cancer awareness by Churchill Downs. Many of the sporting world’s biggest events involve charities, and this year’s Oaks is a fund-raiser for the Susan G. Komen Foundation, the leading breast cancer education and  research organization. (Click here to read Brad Cummings’ Paulick Report Good News Friday article sponsored by Liberation Farm on this issue.) A parade of cancer survivors around the track has the Churchill Downs crowd cheering, and Donna Barton does an interview on horseback with breast cancer survivor  and retired jockey Patti Cooksey, who now works for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission. It’s all good.

5:15 p.m. … Bethany Frankel ("I don’t mind being judgmental," she says…so she really is trainer Bobby Frankel’s daughter!) picks the winner of a hat contest that is part of the show. HRTV’s Carolyn Conley didn’t make it to the finals with her potted plant hat. Haven’t seen a horse yet on the Bravo telecast, but I’m sure we will sooner or later.

5:20 p.m. … It’s the dynamic handicapping duo of Neumier and Mike  Battaglia (nice pink tie, Mike!), who’d have a hard time picking winners in a walkover. Battaglia tells people not to bet on the race…just watch it and enjoy. Let’s hope Bob Evans, the Churchill Downs chairman, isn’t watching. CDI doesn’t make money by having people just watch a race.

5:25 p.m. … Tom Hammond and retired Hall of Fame jockey Gary Stevens make their first appearance on the show and start talking about the horse race to come. (NIce pink ties, fellas!) And there are the horses in the paddock.

Another serious note: the Make a Wish Foundation has a young girl, Rachel Mattson, the filly’s namesake, brought next to Rachel Alexandra and she’s given a souvenir pink halter with the filly’s name on it, and jockey Calvin Borel goes out of his way to greet Miss Mattson.

5:35 p.m. … There’s a lot of talk about Rachel Alexandra being nearly unbeatable, but we’ve yet to see any of her dominating performances via videotape on the telecast….just lots of voiceovers by Stevens and Hammonds as they show the paddock scene. I’d love them to show the replay of the Fair Grounds Oaks, where Borel spent most of the final sixteenth of a mile celebrating, doing everything but flipping the bird to the jockeys who were racing behind him that day. He was told to tone it down a bit for the Medaglia d’Oro filly’s next winning start, the Fantasy Stakes at Oaklawn Park.

Rachel Alexandra comes into the race off a four-race winning streak that began last November in the Golden Rod Stakes at Churchill Downs. Prior to that, she’d won 2-of-5 starts for trainer Hal Wiggins and her owners, L and M Partners. The Kentucky Oaks is Rachel Alexandra’s first Grade 1 race.

5:45 p.m. … I’d guess 18 lengths (it was 20 1/4, officially). Rachel Alexandra just destroyed her opposition in the Oaks. Calvin Borel actually gets paid for that ride? Other than a few looks back to his inside and outside, Borel sat chilly as a statue down the stretch after Rachel Alexandra took the lead from pacesetter Gabby’s Golden Gal inside the five-sixteenths pole. "It’s the greatest horse I’ve ever been on in my life," an emotional Borel said of the long-bodied filly in a post-race interview with Donna Brothers. of NBC.

"Tremendous," Hal Wiggins said to NBC’s Kenny Rice. "More than what I thought I had to tell you the truth." He was asked about running the filly in the Kentucky Derby and said it "never entered my mind," though added he might think about it as he soaks in the victory.

Rachel Alexandra covered the 1 1/8 miles in 1:48 4/5, following early fractions of :23 3/5, :47 2/5 and 1:11 4/5, but it wasn’t the time that she posted as much as the manner of this victory. I’ve only seen one filly win by a bigger margin, and that was Landaluce winning the six-furlong Hollywood Park Lassie Stakes  (since renamed the Landaluce) by 21 lengths. The quality of Landaluce’s competition in that Grade 2 race wasn’t that strong, and neither was this year’s Kentucky Oaks, but when you put that much daylight between yourself and your foes, it is spectacular, no matter who you beat. Only Secretariat’s 1973 Belmont Stakes victory by 31 lengths was more dominating, at least in my memory.

Stone Legacy, one of three fillies entries from the barn of D. Wayne Lukas (trainer of Landaluce), finished second, with Flying Spur third.

Dolphus Morrison, the breeder and co-owner of Rachel Alexandra, said he has no regrets not running his filly in the Kentucky Derby. "No sir," he told Bob Costas. "The Triple Crown races are a showcase for the future stallions of our industry and fillies should run with fillies and stallions with stallions."

I’ve got a feeling the connections of the 20 colts scheduled to run in the Derby aren’t regretting his decision, either.

That’s it from Ray Paulick

Postscript: Stormalory, who pulled up as the favorite in the American Turf, was euthanized because of multiple fractures to his left front leg.


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