Posts Tagged ‘Macho Again’
Thursday, November 26th, 2009
The upcoming long holiday weekend provides an opportunity for three tracks–Hollywood Park, Aqueduct and Churchill Downs—to run a combined total of 16 graded stakes, many with entrants coming out of the Breeders’ Cup Championships held earlier this month at Santa Anita.
Churchill Downs has carded the 1 1/8-mile G2 Falls City as the 11th of 12 races on Thursday. Unbridled Belle hopes to go out a winner before she heads for the breeding shed. The 6-year-old mare has accumulated almost $1.9 million in earnings and will face off against another millionaire, Swift Temper, who has gotten the best of Unbridled Belle in their three previous meetings this year.
Friday’s feature race, the G2 Clark Handicap, has attracted a stellar field of competitors, including Macho Again, Bullsbay, Etched, Blame and Einstein, the highweight in the 1 1/8-mile dirt event. The 7-year-old will start from the far outside post (14) in what will be the 30th and final race of his career. With regular rider Julien Leparoux in Japan, Rajiv Maragh will take over in the irons. The G3 River City Handicap (race 9) at 1 1/8 miles on the turf, is on the undercard.
Churchill’s meet closes on Saturday with the running of twin G2 stakes, the Golden Rod for fillies, and the Kentucky Jockey Club for colts and geldings. Sassy Image, winner of the opening weekend’s Pocahontas Stakes, as well as the runner-up in that race, Decelerator, are expected to start. The upset winner of the Iroquois, Thiskyhasnolimit, is the 2-1 favorite in the field of nine in the Kentucky JC. Both races are 1 1/16 miles on the main track.
Aqueduct hosts the G3 Fall Highweight on Thursday, the G2 Top Flight Handicap on Friday, and a quartet of graded stakes on Saturday, highlighted by the G1 Hill ‘n’ Dale Cigar Mile. Pyro, winner of the Forego and Kodiak Kowboy, victor of the Vosburgh, are co-highweights at 120 lbs. They will be facing DeFrancis winner Vineyard Haven, Bribon and Driven By Success. With the coupling of Pyro and Vineyard Haven, there will be only four betting interests.
Also on the Aqueduct’s Saturday card is the running of the 1 1/8-mile G1 Gazelle for 3-year-old fillies. Stardom Bound will be in the spotlight here; she had a string of five consecutive G1 wins to her credit, before finishing third in the Ashland in April. This will be her first start on the dirt. The other two graded stakes will focus on juveniles–the G2 Demoiselle for fillies, and the G2 Remsen for males, both run at 1 1/8 miles on the dirt. The winners of these races may be pointing to a race on the first Saturday in May next year.
The G1 Citation kicks off the three-day Hollywood Park Turf Festival on Friday and features a field of ten older horses going 1 1/16 miles. Cowboy Cal, winner of the Oak Tree Mile, will attempt to redeem himself in the Citation after a 10th-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Mile. Proudinsky and Fluke, also entered in the Citation, will both be saddled by Bobby Frankel’s long-time assistant Humberto Ascanio, who is now the trainer of record for the late Hall of Famer’s starters.
Saturday’s Hollywood stakes are the G1 Matriarch for fillies and mares going a mile on grass, supported by the G3 Generous, for two-year-olds, also at a mile. The Matriarch pits two outstanding mares against each other—Ventura and Diamondrella. Both were last seen at the Breeders’ Cup; Ventura was second in the Filly & Mare Sprint, while Diamondrella ran a disappointing 11th in the Turf Sprint. Following the Breeders’ Cup, Diamondrella changed barns and is now with jockey-turned-trainer Gary Stevens.
Hollywood’s Turf Festival concludes on Sunday with the running of the G1 Hollywood Derby and the G3 Miesque (a mile for 2-year-old fillies). In the 1 ¼-mile Hollywood Derby, we can expect to see Take the Points square off against Battle of Hastings. Another intriguing entry is Black Bear Island. Now with Julio Canani, the son of Sadler’s Wells was previously conditioned by Aiden O’Brien.
Tags: aqueduct, Battle of Hastings, Black Bear Island, Blame, bobby frankel, Breeders' Cup, Bullsbay, churchill downs, Citation, clark handicap, cowboy cal, Decelerator, Demoiselle, Diamondrella, einstein, Etched, Falls City Handicap, Fluke, Gazelle, Generous, Golden Rod, hollywood derby, Hollywood Park, Humberto Ascanio, Iroquois Stakes, julien leparoux, julio canani, KBC Horse Supplies, Kentucky Jockey Club, Macho Again, matriarch, Oak Tree Mile, Pocahontas Stakes, Proudinsky, Rajiv Maragh, remsen, River City Handicap, Sassy Image, stardom bound, Take The Points, Thiskyhasnolimit, unbridled belle, ventura, Weekend Stakes: Where to Watch Posted in Weekend Stakes: Where to Watch | Comments Off
Saturday, October 3rd, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Belmont Park offers five Grade 1 races today, beginning with the Beldame (you remember, the race where TVG boosted the purse in hopes of getting Zenyatta and Rachel Alexandra, connections for neither of which appeared to take very seriously). I’ll be writing a live blog providing results of Belmont’s races (following the Beldame is the Vosburgh for sprinters, the Flower Bowl for fillies and mares on turf, the Joe Hirsch Turf Classic Invitational for male turf horses, and the Jockey Club Gold Cup, which pits the top-class 3-year-olds Summer Bird and Quality Road against Macho Again, who nearly caught Rachel Alexandra in the Woodward Stakes. I’ll provide some of the other day’s graded stakes activity from Hawthorne, where the Grade 2 Hawthorne Gold Cup is being run, as the serious final prep races for the Breeders’ Cup World Championships get under way.
(All photos by Eric Kalet.)
Here is a link to today’s Belmont Park Equibase charts.
Post time for the Beldame is 3:23 p.m. Eastern.
The rains came midway through the Belmont card, and though the main track was still called fast when Music Note entered the gate as the 1-5 favorite in the Beldame, it was a very wet, fast track. Music Note may have had a few nervous moments, as track announcer Tom Durkin said, when she was pinned down on the rail in the long run down the backstretch while tracking pacesetter Unbridled Belle. But jockey Rajiv Muragh, moved the daughter of A.P. Indy to the outside around the turn and she wore down Unbridled Belle to get the win by 2 1/4 lengths, covering the distance in 1:48.49. Unbridled Belle (who set soft fractions of :24.24, :47.99 and 1:11.66) held second, with Copper State third and Captain’s Lover fourth in the five-horse field. Captain’s Lover and Unbridled Belle were coupled, and Captain’s Lover and John Velazquez did their best to keep Music Note down on the rail, but Captain’s Lover couldn’t keep up after five furlongs.
Music Note was winning for the seventh time in 11 starts for Godolphin. This was just her third start of the year, following a fifth-place finish in the Ogden Phipps at Belmont Park and a victory in Saratoga’s Ballerina. She finished third behind Zenyatta and stablemate Cocoa Beach in last year’s Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic (formerly the Distaff). The Saeed bin Suroor-trained filly paid $2.50 for the win.
Couple of college football notes: Michigan State upset previously unbeaten Michigan, 26-20, in overtime. Alabama crushed the University of Kentucky Wildcasts 38-20.
3:58 p.m. … The rain at Belmont has gotten worse, making it tough to even pick up the horses on the television feed. Good luck Tom Durkin, though the fact the Vosburgh is a four-horse field makes it a lot easier for him.
Kodiak Kowboy got up in the final strides to beat odds-on favorite Fabulous Strike by a half-length in the six-furlong Vosburgh under Shaun Bridgmohan. The 4-year-old son of Posse owned by Rick Porter Fox Hill Farms and Tom Simon’s Vinery Stables was back in the care of trainer Steve Asmussen for the Vosburgh after being transferred from Asmussen to Larry Jones a little over a year ago.
Fabulous Strike got a stalking trip, settling just off the pace of Go Go Shoot, with Munnings in third and Kodiak Kowboy the trailer. Go Go Shoot went a quick opening quarter-mile in :22.33 over a very rain-soaked track. Fabulous Strike moved to the lead on the turn under Ramon Dominquez, but Kodiak Kowboy was beginning his rally before straightening out for the stretch run. He appeared to have all the momentum, but hesitated when he was getting the muddy kickback from Fabulous Strike. Bridgmohan shifted Kodiak Kowboy to the outside and he quickly regained his best stride and went on to win by a half length. Munning was third after never really threatening.
This was the 10th win from 22 starts for Kodiak Kowboy and the second in a Grade 1 race, following his victory earlier this year in the Carter Handicap at Aqueduct. He had finished second to Pyro in the Forego and third behind Fabulous Strike and Go Go Shoot in the Aflred G. Vanderbilt Handicap in his previous two starts. Kodiak Kowboy ran third for Jones in last year’s Vosburgh.
Kodiak Kowboy covered the six furlongs on a sloppy main track in 1:10.08 and paid $11.60.
4:15 p.m. … When Matt Carothers sings Happy Birthday to Ken Rudulph on TVG, that can mean one of two things: mute button or HRTV. We’ll go for the latter. I have a feeling I’m not alone.
4:30 p.m. … Congrats to Equibase for putting together a useful late changes/scratches service. I won’t ask what took so long. Here is the link to Belmont’s late changes. Presious Passion wasn’t listed as a scratch from the Joe Hirsch last time I looked, but that was the word from the television talking heads. Carribean Sunset has been scratched from the Flower Bowl, while Gio Ponti’s entrymate Winchester and Ready’s Echo have been scratched from the Hirsch.
The rains are still falling heavily at Belmont Park as the field of fillies and mares heads toward the gate for the Flower Bowl.
4:40 p.m. … Julien Leparoux gave the ever-consistent Pure Clan a perfectly timed ride in the Flower Bowl, getting up in the final sixteenth of a mile, then pulling away to beat Criticism by 2 3/4 lengths over a boggy Belmont turf course. Queen of Hearts was third and Moneycantbuymelove fourth.
Leamington took the early lead in the Flower Bowl, putting up very slow splits of :26.81 for the quarter, :53.81 for the half-mile and 1:20.43 for six furlongs on the soft turf, with Criticism tracking her. Leparoux had Pure Clan in good position in fifth, then rallied on the final turn and took dead aim at Criticism and jockey Javiar Castellano.
It was the eighth victory in 15 starts and 14th 1-2-3 finish for the Lakland Farm runner trained by Bob Holthus. The daughter of the Storm Cat stallion Pure Prize was coming off a third in the Beverly D. Stakes at Arlington and had one previous Grade 1 victory in last year’s American Oaks on the Hollywood Park turf course. Pure Clan was never a factor in last year’s Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf at Santa Anita.
Final time of the 1 1/4 mile Flower Bowl was 2:12.43 after a mile fraction of 1:46.63. It was a bog out there, but Pure Clan didn’t seem to mind it one bit.
5:08 p.m. … It’s true that you don’t see the Phipps Stable silks at Thistledown that often, but the trip by Gone Astray from Belmont Park to Cleveland was well worth it as the son of Dixie Union sat off the early pace set by War Fighter, moved to the lead at midstretch and drew away impressively by 2 1/4 lengths. The Shug McGaughey-trained colt was coming off a big win in the Pennsylvania Derby. Gone Astray covered the 1 1/8 miles in 1:50.56 War Fighter was second, with Ice Road third. Gone Astray was the 2-5 favorite.
5:15 p.m. … Gio Ponti looked like a winner in the Joe Hirsch Turf Classic Invitational when he cruised up alongside pacesetter Interpatation at the top of the stretch, but the Bobby Barbara-trained 7-year-old gelding by Langfuhr found a second wind in the final furlong and rerallied to beat Gio Ponti by 1 3/4 lengths on an extremely soft turf course.
Robbie Albarado rode the winner, who was getting just his sixth career win from 50 starts for owner Elliot Mavorah. He set all the fractions of :26.01, :54.22, 1:22.20 and 1:48.77 for the opening mile After a mile and a quarter time of 2:14.59, Interpatation completed the 1 1/2 miles in 2:41.22, about 17 seconds slower than the course record.
Interpatation hadn’t finished in the top three in his last seven starts. His last in the money finish came when second to Grand Couturier in the 2008 Joe Hirsch Turf Invitational. Gio Ponti, on the other hand, came into the Joe Hirsch off four consecutive Grade 1 victories, but the 1 1/2 miles of the race and the soft conditions may have exposed the 4-year-old son of Tale of the Cat’s distance limitations, as he had never raced farther than 1 3/8 miles.
Interpatation paid $89.50 on a $2 wager to win. Telling, the original third-place finisher, was disqualified and placed fourth behind Grand Couturier for interference.
5:30 p.m. … Awesome Gem and David Flores ran down Nite Light to win the $500,000 Hawthorne Gold Cup going away at Hawthorne Park, giving West Point Thoroughbreds the first leg of a big potential parlay that could culminate with a victory in the Jockey Club Gold Cup only a few minutes from now with Macho Again. Going Ballistic was third and You and I Forever fourth in the mile and a quarter Gold Cup, a Grade 2 event.
5:50 p.m. … The rain has subsided as the field entered the gate for the Jockey Club Gold Cup, which begins midway around the clubhouse turn on this 1 1/2 mile oval.
Summer Bird and Quality Road put on a show, racing together the length stretch while well off the rail, but Summer Bird prevailed by one length to win the Jockey Club Gold Cup on a sloppy dirt track. Pacesetting Tizway was third, with Macho Again never really getting untracked and finishing fourth.
Summer Bird only has four career victories to his credit, beginning with a maiden win at Oaklawn Park in March. But the son of Gainesway stallion Birdstone, owned and bred by Drs. K.K. and Devi Jayaraman and trained by Tim Ice, has built quite a resume with the other three victories, all Grade 1–the Belmont Stakes in June, the Travers in August, and now the Jockey Club Gold Cup in early October–to make him the clear leader for an Eclipse Award in the 3-year-old male division.
Kent Desormeaux allowed Summer Bird to settle off the early pace set first by Tizway through the opening quarter mile in :24.96 and then by Quality Road through a half mile in :49.73 and six furlongs in 1:13.12. Sensing that Quality Road might have it too easy on the front end, Desormeaux moved Summer Bird toward the lead before hitting the far turn, and engaged Quality Road in earnest when the pair hit the top of the stretch, the mile in 1:37.62. With Summer Bird on the outside, the pair raced together to the final sixteenth, when Summer Bird edged away gradually for the win, the 1 1/4 miles in 2:02.51 on the sloppy track.
There were plenty of other races on the day that I didn’t blog about, but George Jacob and Jill Baffert’s Misremembered won the Grade 2 Indiana Derby, which offered a $500,000 purse. Victor Espinosa rode the winner, a son of Candy Ride. Giant Oak finished second, a half length back, with Karama third. Win Willy, the slight favorite over Misremembered, finished fifth.
POST RACE COMMENTS, COURTESY OF THE NEW YORK RACING ASSOCIATION MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
BELDAME QUOTES
Saeed bin Suroor winning trainer of favored Music Note (No. 2): "She was really happy, relaxed, in condition. She showed her good turn of foot. I was waiting for him to take her outside. When he did, I was happy. We’ll take her to the Breeders’ Cup. Nine furlongs (in the Ladies Classic) will suit her. She looked better than ever."
Rick Mettee, assistant to winning trainer Saeed bin Suroor of favored Music Note (No. 2): "It was good race riding on the part of the entry’s riders. It wasn’t unexpected, but luckily she got separation off the turn. I was a little concerned about how well Unbridled Belle was traveling. When they got head-to-head, Ramon (Dominguez, jockey on Unbridled Belle) had gone to the stick and Rajiv (Maragh, jockey on Music Note) had not. This is the fifth Grade 1 for this filly and four of them are here (at Belmont)."
Rajiv Maragh, winning rider aboard favored Music Note (No. 2): "I was comfortable because I didn’t want to go too early. I wanted to get my filly to relax. Once I was behind the horses, she was getting into a nice, high cruising speed. I was pretty happy. I knew they were going to spread out at some point in the race. Once they did, that’s when I made a move to get clear. There was a lot of racetrack left by the time I got open."
Ramon Dominguez, rider aboard runner-up Unbridled Belle (No. 1a): "I had a good trip. My filly was relaxed and the other filly was just much the best."
VOSBURGH QUOTES
Scott Blasi, assistant to winning trainer Steve Asmussen, of Kodiak Kowboy (No. 4): "It set up great for him. There was plenty of speed up front. He’s been such a top horse his whole career."
Shaun Bridgmohan, winning jockey aboard Kodiak Kowboy (No. 4): "I was on him when he won the Saratoga Special. He was a pro even back then. When he was transferred to Steve Asmussen’s barn, I was excited because I knew I had a shot at getting back on him. Today, when I hit him left-handed, he really dug in gamely."
Todd Beattie, trainer of favored runner-up Fabulous Strike (No. 5): "We’re disappointed with the way he broke through the gate. I thought we were home free until Kodiak Cowboy caught him. Kodiak Cowboy is a tough customer. We have been battling with him for quite a long time. It was obvious he ran well today. You cannot knock my horse’s effort. He made a good, solid effort. I knew he handled the off going. I was surprised they finished in 1:10. I will have to talk to the owner about the Breeders’ Cup."
Ramon Dominguez, rider aboard favored runner-up Fabulous Strike (No. 5): "Tough beat, unfortunately it didn’t work out our way today. We had an ideal trip. I sat right off [Go Go Shoot] in front and made the lead with ease when I wanted, I just couldn’t hold off the winner."
FLOWER BOWL QUOTES
Bob Holthus, winning trainer, Pure Clan (No. 3): "She ran a great race. I’m glad it’s over. She showed more speed today than normal. She was in the race all the way. [Jockey] Julien [Leparoux] had confidence. It’s always good to get Grade 1’s."
Julien Leparoux, winning rider aboard Pure Clan (No. 3): "She ran well today. We wanted her behind the pace so she would make a big run at the end. The turf course was really soft and she had to work hard at it in the stretch. Still, she got the job done."
Tom Albertrani, trainer of runner-up Criticism (No. 5): ""We were pleased with her. She came back to her previous races [and] found her best stride. We were really happy with the way she had been coming into this race since she was training so well. Today, she fired her shot. She is definitely better going longer. We are considering bringing bring her to the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf."
Javier Castellano, runner-up jockey, Criticism (No. 5): "I’m very satisfied with the way she ran. She was stalking, just like we wanted. Unfortunately, she was second best, but I’m very happy."
JOE HIRSCH TURF CLASSIC QUOTES
Bobby Barbara, winning trainer, Interpatation (No. 3): "It was great. Great! I just loved the way he looked going down the backside. In front of me, over here, he was just galloping on the lead and Robby just said he was having fun doing it. I was waiting for him one day to pick his head up and do it right. He did it right, on the perfect day. This horse made $700,000 the hard way, and now he’s over a million in one day! I don’t know what’s next for him."
Robby Albarado, winning rider aboard Interpatation (No. 3): "I had never ridden him before. Bobby said in the paddock, he’s a stayer. He said a mile and a half is his distance, he ran his best race here last year, when he was second. I had the intention of being forwardly placed, and I ended up on the lead, galloping, in a canter. At every point, I had plenty of horse. When Gio Ponti ran up to me, I thought, ‘Gee, maybe I can get second.’ But he didn’t get away from me, and my horse hit his stride."
Christophe Clement, trainer of beaten favorite and runner-up Gio Ponti (No. 1): "Second best in that one, but I thought he ran a very good race - he really tried. The idea is to go from there to the Breeders’ Cup, use the race and move on."
Ramon Dominguez, jockey aboard beaten favorite and runner-up Gio Ponti (No. 1): "He handled the going well. He just got a little tired at the end."
JOCKEY CLUB GOLD CUP QUOTES
Tim Ice, winning trainer of Summer Bird (No. 3): "When Kent swung him to the outside I knew he had the spot he wanted. He had said in the paddock the inside wasn’t that good so he wanted him about four or five off the rail. When Summer Bird took the lead I was very confident that no one was going to get in front of him. Summer Bird was hanging a little bit on him; Kent said it was easier than it looked. He was in no doubt he was going to win the race. [The last sixteenth] I was thinking no one was going to get by him. He’s that kind of a racehorse. He’s going to dig back in. I was feeling pretty confident."
"It means a lot to win the three races in New York. It’s been 20 years since a three-year-old won the Belmont Stakes, the Travers, and the Jockey Club Gold Cup. I think it puts him in an elite group and he should be named [champion] three-year-old colt."
"The goal is the Breeders’ Cup [Classic]. We’ll take a couple of days and see how he is."
Kent Desormeaux, winning rider aboard Summer Bird (No. 3): "Unlike the Travers, he was completely off the bridle, just cruising along. Once I positioned him, he was floating, completely turned off. I think he was idling in the stretch. At the quarter pole, he spit past Quality Road and he was idling. He’s trying to be the best horse I’ve ever ridden. [Best effort yet?] "By far. He was awesome today. He pulled up quietly like nothing had ever happened."
Todd Pletcher, trainer of runner-up Quality Road (No. 7): "He ran well. I don’t think [his acting up] before the start had any bearing on the race. I think he’s better on fast track. Summer Bird relishes this kind of surface. [Breeders' Cup?] We will talk with Mr. [Edward] Evans. It’s run on synthetic so we have some thinking to do."
John Velazquez, rider aboard runner-up Quality Road (No. 7): ""He put in a good effort. I don’t think we’ve seen the best of him yet. I’m not knocking the other horse [Summer Bird]. The other horse ran a great race, too. I think my horse is better on a dry track. I would like to see both horses on a dry track to see which one is the best horse. [Summer Bird] had an advantage over my horse. He had been running all summer long. My horse was stopped twice and came back at 6 1/2 [furlongs] then went to a mile and a quarter over a wet track. I’m not frustrated. I just think my horse is better than [he was today]."
H. James Bond, trainer of third-place finisher Tizway (No. 4): "A good effort. The other horse just loves the mud."
Rajiv Maragh, rider aboard third-place finisher Tizway (No. 4): "My horse earned respect for finishing third. We had a clear shot with a nice pace. The race really took off at the half-mile pole and he couldn’t keep up with the top two. We were clearly third best. This was a good group of horses. To be third-best in this race, it’s not disappointing because there were good horses behind us."
Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report
Savvy businesses recognize value. Advertise in the Paulick Report.
Sign up for our Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick
Tags: Beldame, belmont park, Flower Bowl, gio ponti, hawthorne, Hawthorne Gold Cup, interpatation, jockey club gold cup, Joe Hirsch Turf Classic, kodiak kowboy, Macho Again, music note, Paulick Report, paulick report live blog, pure clan, Rachel Alexandra, Ray Paulick, Summer Bird, Vosburgh, zenyatta Posted in Live Blogs, Stakes Results, breeders' cup preps | 12 Comments »
Saturday, September 5th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Rachel Alexandra won Saturday’s $750,000 Woodward by a diminishing head over Macho Again, making history by becoming the first filly or mare to win the historic Grade 1 race, run over 1 1/8 miles at Saratoga.
Jess Jackson and Harold McCormick’s 3-year-old daughter of Medaglia d’Oro kept her perfect 2009 record intact, winning for the eighth time this year, defeating males for the third time, and making her first venture in the older horse category a successful one.
While the margin of victory was the smallest of her 11 career victories (from 14 starts), the now-almost certain pick for Horse of the Year was under pressure every step of the way in the 56th running of the Woodward. First it was the 2008 Belmont Stakes winner, Da’ Tara, who pushed Rachel Alexandra through a sizzling opening quarter mile in :22.85 seconds and a half in :46.41. Then it was Past the Point, who forced Jackson’s two-time Horse of the Year Curlin to the limit in last year’s Woodward. Past the Point ranged up alongside, as Rachel Alexandra ran the first six furlongs in 1:10.54. And then Whitney winner Bullsbay came up to challenge as the field rounded the final turn.
Borel sat chilly on Rachel Alexandra to the top of the stretch, then inside the three-sixteenths pole asked her for everything she had, first going to a right-handed whip, giving her two taps on the right flank, then switching to the left hand, hitting her five times, then switching back over to the right hand, striking her a dozen times or more with every stride she took to the wire.
Macho Again raced far back early as the trailer, saved some ground into the stretch and then closed resolutely. Robbie Albarado appeared to have to straighten out the son of Macho Uno as he was leaning in on Bullsbay inside the eighth pole, losing some momentum, but the wire came just in time for Rachel and Borel. Bullsbay finished third. Asiatic Boy, who made a wide move while appearing to be a threat around the final bend, finished fourth, and he was followed by It’s a Bird, Past the Post, Cool Coal Man, and Da’ Tara, who was eased.
Rachel Alexandra covered the 1 1/8 miles on a fast track in 1:48.29, after a mile clocking in 1:35.48. She carried 118 pounds, getting an eight-pound age and sex allowance from her older male rivals. Steve Asmussen has trained Rachel Alexandra to her last four victories, taking over from Hal Wiggins after Jackson and McCormick bought the filly following her 20 1/4-length win in the Kentucky Oaks. She then reeled off wins in the Preakness Stakes over Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird, the Mother Goose Stakes at Belmont, and the Haskell Invitational at Monmouth Park against colts. She had race previously for her breeder, Dolphus Morrison. Rachel Alexandra was produced from the Roar mare, Lotta Kim.
Rachel Alexandra tossed Calvin Borel in the post parade but didn’t get loose from the outrider. Borel had taken his left foot out of the stirrups as Rachel Alexandra was tossing her head started to brush with the outrider’s pony. Just then, she threw her head up and down and appeared to catch Borel in the head with her nose, throwing him to the ground. He quickly remounted, and Rachel Alexandra didn’t seem to lose her composure in the incident.
Rachel Alexandra paid $2.60 to win as the heavy favorite.
Rachel Alexandra joins a roster of legendary Thoroughbreds to have won the Woodward, which until 2006 had been run at Aqueduct or Belmont Park. Among the previous winners of the race were Kelso, Buckpasser, Damascus, Forego, Seattle Slew, Affirmed, Spectacular Bid, Alysheba, Easy Goer, Holy Bull, Cigar, Ghostzapper, and Curlin. With the record she has compiled — 11 wins in 14 starts and earnings of $2,948,354 – Rachel Alexandra easily deserves to mentioned in the same sentence as any of them.
Click here to see a video of Rachel Alexandra’s historic Woodward victory.Â
Click here for the official chart.
The Woodward attracted a crowd of 31,171, many of whom wore “Rachel” buttons given away by the New York Racing Association.
Â
New York Racing Association Press Office Woodward Post-Race Quotes
Winning Connections
Â
“I thought she truly showed she was a champion today. I can’t say enough, first of all, about Jess and the guts they’ve shown by continuously putting out there and raising the bar with a tremendous filly. I’m just extremely proud to be associated with her. I’m proud of the whole team, (assistant trainer) Scott Blasi, (exercise rider) Dominic Terry, it was a very emotional win.â€
Â
“Honestly, I thought she was going to let Da’ Tara and Past the Point go. But it didn’t work out that way.â€
Â
“A lot gets said about the other mare [Zenyatta] and what’s next, but I think we ought to focus on exactly what happened today.â€
Â
[What will he look for in the coming days?] “I’ll watch her appetite, I  rely heavily on Scott and Dominic … every single little nuance about her, how she acts in her stall, exactly how long it takes her to eat, the whole nine yards. The filly has been tremendously consistent and we’ve been blessed with her consistency as well as her greatness.â€
Â
“I was most concerned of any of the races we’ve been in. I thought [there was] a crucial period of time two weeks ago, the weather didn’t cooperate, it wasn’t exactly ideal. A lot of muddy tracks, concern about the work — we brought her over and worked on the main track instead of Oklahoma like we were wanting to. There were variables we hadn’t faced in her previous races. It was a challenge for her.â€
Â
“When Jess has been presented with options, he has taken the toughest one every time.â€
Â
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
Â
Winning owner, Jess Jackson of Rachel Alexandra: “You worry about every race. You worry more about her coming out of the race safely. There was a moment there, with those early fractions, I was concerned.
Â
“She’s been tested early two or three times now, and she’s had the courage and fortitude to finish, and with an attitude to hang in there and win. That’s a very exceptional horse, male or female, and for her to do that with six giant males racing with her was something special. I don’t know if you saw it, but she looked like she was only a 3-year-old with those horses. And yet she held in there with her spirit. I want to thank Saratoga. It’s always been a special place for me and my family and racing. And Curlin won this same race last year so it has special meaning for me and our team and I hope for Steve as well. What we need now are more stars, and I think she is one. I hope we can see her come out healthy, give her a nice race and give you a campaign in 2010.â€
Â
For the owners, I want to thank Steve and Scott and Amy and all the crew, the exercise [riders]. We have a team that has been exceptional, particularly for her. And I’ve got to thank Calvin; he kept her out of trouble today. She could have been easily boxed in with two speed horses with 1 and 7, and they were both part of a team that would normally, paired up, take a rabbit and run. She became the rabbit and she still persevered. That was an exceptional race, and I appreciate everbody’s support here in Saratoga. The fans have been great as well.â€
Â
Â
“There’s a little bit of communication though. The confidence the team shows in her workouts and in her training and whether she’s gaining weight and whether she’s getting her sleep – the Z’s matter you know. She’s pretty calm around the stable. Those kinds of things have to be part of the formula, and I’ve got an instinct to try to put another hurdle up to see if she can achieve it, and I’m so delighted this campaign worked out well because you know whose neck would have been on the line.â€
Â
On Zenyatta: “I can’t predict. It depends on both horses coming out and what both camps would be willing to do. I’ve indicated Rachel’s had a full race year already. It might be that they get together, but I can’t predict that. It takes two to [tango], but it better be a good venue or neither one will come.â€
Â
Horse of the Year? “Somebody else will decide that, but I hope so. I think she’s something for the ages and she’s certainly proven her mettle. On the earlier question about her attitude, she is a fighter. After blazing those fractions and in the Haskell, she still won. And maybe this wasn’t a pull-away victory, but if we run her again, the next one will be. She was, in my opinion, a little down today, but she still won and that’s the courage and fight she has.â€
Â
Another race in 2009?: “I can’t honestly say. Hal (Harold McCormick) and I will have to talk about it and Steve’s going to have to bless her coming out and what her condition is. She’s run more races than Zenyatta’s run, and Zenyatta’s 5 years old. You can’t expect a young youngster – she’s only 3 – running against older horses, running against older mares – you can’t expect them to keep going all the time. You have to give them a break, and we’ll talk that over very seriously.â€
Â
On Calvin’s victory celebration: “I don’t know if you saw it, but I gave him the signal to go V, because I went V, he went V. Calvin is a fully honest and emotional person. He is a fair rider. He takes chances at times but you can depend on Calvin with Rachel. They are really a mating of rider and horse that’s for the ages.â€
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
Â
Winning jockey Calvin Borel on the pre-race incident in which he was unseated during the Post Parade: “She was pretty keyed up. She went to duck away. The pony guy did a good job of turning her loose. When the fans hollered real loud, it just scared her. I can’t blame her. When a crowd hollers all at one time, it kind of surprised her. It took me by surprise.
Â
On the race itself: “She was a little aggressive. Steve had talked to me during the week and said, ‘She might be a little bit fresh. So, save me some horse for the last 40 or 50 yards, or sixteenth of a mile.’  I’m glad he had told me that because I rode her a little bit more confident and sitting chilly until it was time to go. He was right about everything. For the last 40 or 50 yards, she had enough. We went pretty rapid and I knew we were going pretty rapid. I never took anything away from her as long as I had been riding her. I’m not going to change. I knew we were stepping up against older horses. I think she was as good as them, or better.
Â
On Macho Again approaching her during the stretch run: “She would never let him go by her. Every time he went up to her, she would dig in again. Even galloping out, I said to Robby, ‘You ain’t going by us.’ She is such a tremendous filly. He ran up to her three times and she kept giving me a little bit more.
Â
“I switched sticks on her twice. That’s more than I have ever done. Hitting her is not going to make her run faster. I think when a horse is going to come up to her, I think that’s when you will see her run. She does what she has to do. She was going fast enough. I never beat her up. I barely tap her because she gives me everything she’s got. She was a little tired.
Â
“She’s a champion. She’s the reason we come here. We did a lot today. Today, we made history which nobody ever did it. It was a big [weight] off of me because I wanted to win this race really bad. It’s like winning the Kentucky Derby. I knew she was good enough to do it and I had to go out there and not mess it up.â€
Â
Winning trainer Steve Asmussen of Rachel Alexandra: “[Calvin getting dumped before the race] wasn’t a concern after she won. I’m nervous about everything. I’m nervous until they put her number up. I’m very proud of the outcome.  The (fractions) might have taken a couple of years off my life, but it’s worth it.
Steve Asmussen, winning trainer, Rachel Alexandra (No. 3 ): “I can’t say enough about the race she put in today under the circumstances. It means so much to me and everyone involved with her. For Jess and Barbara to allow us the opportunity to run her in these races, I can’t say enough. She came through today like a true champion. At 22 and change, I started worrying . I worried until they put her number up. I can’t say how proud of her I am. Her performance, under the pressure that she always is, stepping up and raising her game … what a tremendous victory today. She didn’t lope along on the lead or anything today. She’s a spectacular athlete.â€
Â
Calvin Borel, winning jockey aboard Rachel Alexandra (No. 3 ): “It was a great race. She stepped up and proved to be the best. If she won it would have been good. If she had lost, it still would have been good. She’s a three-year-old that went up against older horses, who knows how good she is?
Â
“She was a little aggressive early, but I was comfortable. Five weeks – she was real fresh. I was comfortable, the last forty yards I was a little worried, but she just kept digging in. She’s unbelievable.â€
Â
Jess Jackson, winning owner, Rachel Alexandra (No. 3): “Wow…The ride was perfect. She was ready. Those are a lot of big animals that she was running against, but she showed her speed, she showed her class and she didn’t give up. That’s my Rachel. [Her next start] depends on how she comes out of the race. I hope she’s sound, then it would be a question of whether there’s something adequate for her.â€
Â
Dallas Stewart, trainer of runner-up Macho Again (No. 4 ): “I knew it was going to be a great race. I knew he was ready. I’m never happy to be second, but it turns out like that and as they say in New Orleans, ‘It be’s like that.’ A couple more jumps, we might have got her. But she’s great. That’s horse racing. She’s eight for eight.â€
Â
Robby Albarado, jockey aboard runner up Macho Again (No. 4 ): “She’s a champion. Champions do that. Champions find ways to win.
Â
“I never thought I had her. You never think you have champions. She’s a great filly. The only thing I was hoping was that at some point she would tire or do something. She’s great. What can I say. Nothing much I can say. She’s great.
Â
“The pace was great. I can’t keep Macho any closer than he is because it would compromise his chances. I was far back. I didn’t realize they were rocking and rolling up front but I knew there were going fast. I was hoping someone would soften her up but obviously they didn’t. I wasn’t surprised she was on the lead. She’s naturally quick.
Â
“Champions show different dimension. She is in a league of her own. She has beaten every top division we have in racing. Older horses, her age, it doesn’t matter. No matter what they throw at her, she’ll beat them.â€
Â
Â
H. Graham Motion, trainer of third-place finisher Bullsbay (No. 2): “I thought he ran huge and the winner was extraordinary. My horse hooked her at the quarter pole and gave her a race, but maybe that took a bit out of her. This is what it’s all about.â€
Â
Jeremy Rose, jockey aboard third-place finisher Bullsbay (No. 2): “My horse left everything on the track. He did everything he could to get by that [filly]. She just isn’t giving up. She’s awesome; there’s no two ways about it.
Â
“The fractions were fast and I thought I was in a perfect spot to catch her. At the quarter-pole, I split Edgar Prado (on Past the Point) and her and I got within a neck of her and she just rebroke. She’s just too good of a horse.
Â
“I thought I had a shot at the top of the stretch. I always think I have a shot on this horse. He always tries and shows up. Just today, she’s just a better horse.â€
Â
Tags: Asiatic Boy, Bullsbay, Calvin Borel, Cool Coal Man, da' tara, It's a Bird, jess jackson, Macho Again, New York Racing Association, nyra, past the point, Rachel Alexandra, saratoga, steve asmussen, Stonestreet Stable, woodward Posted in Rachel Alexandra, Stakes Results, saratoga | 22 Comments »
|
|