Monday, June 06, 2005
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
Nine Possible for Belmont Stakes
The field for the 137th Belmont Stakes (gr. I) on June 11 is slowly taking shape, with at least nine 3-year-olds pointing for the third leg of the Triple Crown. The 1 1/2-mile "Test of the Champion" will be headed by Preakness (gr. I) winner Afleet Alex and Kentucky Derby (gr. I) winner Giacomo. Afleet Alex was originally scheduled to van to Belmont Park last Saturday following his morning jog. But with a suspected case of strangles being investigated there, trainer Tim Ritchey decided to play it safe and keep the son of Northern Afleet at Pimlico, and work him on Wednesday. He will then decide when to ship to Belmont, depending on whether or not the strangles situation is under control. A case of strangles has also been confirmed at Delaware Park where Preakness runner-up Scrappy T is stabled. Horses stabled at Delaware Park are temporarily restricted from New York Racing Association premises, and if there no other additional cases outside the quarantined barn, horses from Delaware will have to provide a negative culture for strangles from a nasopharyngeal wash or swab taken on or after June 6. Out in California, Giacomo breezed seven furlongs in 1:27 at Hollywood Park May 30, and trainer John Shirreffs indicated they are leaning toward heading back east for the Belmont Stakes. If last Saturday's Peter Pan Stakes (gr. II) produces a Belmont starter it likely will not be the runaway winner, Oratory, owned by Sheikh Mohammed's Darley Stable. The colt's connections feel the Belmont comes too close to the Peter Pan, in which Oratory earned a lofty 114 Beyer Speed figure. The two Belmont possibles coming out of the Peter Pan are runner-up Reverberate and the beaten favorite Chekhov, who made a good run on the turn only to flatten out in the stretch. But the $3.3 million Pulpit colt had trouble leaving the gate and put in a strong move, having only a maiden victory to his credit. Reverberate pushed the winner most of the way, and although he was no match for him down the stretch, he did finish well clear of the third horse. Also pointing for the Belmont are the Nick Zito pair of Andromeda's Hero, eighth in the Kentucky Derby, and Pinpoint, winner of the Sir Barton Stakes on the Preakness undercard. Lone Star Derby (gr. III) winner Southern Africa is considered a definite, and Wayne Lukas may run his recent maiden winner A.P. Arrow. Santa Anita Derby (gr. ) winner Buzzards Bay had been considered a definite starter, but trainer Jeff Mullins said, following the colt's :57 2/5 work, that they were passing the race.
Monday, May 30, 2005
Peter Pan Stakes has produced five Belmont winners
Coming off his first career victory, Chekhov is the likely favorite in a field of eight 3-year-olds for the 1 1/8-mile race.
"He is putting everything together now," trainer Patrick Biancone said. "His maiden win was really good and I was quite impressed with him. Now, it's time to test him."
Owners Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith paid $3.3 million for the son of Pulpit at the Keeneland 2-year-olds in training sale, but Chekhov lost his first three starts, developed quarter cracks and needed three months to recover.
But after his 8 ¼-length win at Belmont on May 8, Chekhov could be ready to join the Triple Crown fray and challenge Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo and Preakness winner Afleet Alex in the 1 ½-mile Belmont on June 11.
The Peter Pan has produced five Belmont winners, beginning with Coastal in 1979. The others were Danzig Connection in 1986, A.P. Indy in 1992, Colonial Affair in 1993 and Lemon Drop Kid in 1999.
Reverberate is another Belmont hopeful. The chestnut colt trained by Sal Russo comes into the Peter Pan off a 2 ½-length victory in an allowance race, and is 2-for-2 at Belmont.
"He's fresh, talented and improving," Russo said. "I think he's got a big future. I think he belongs with these."
Jose Santos will be aboard Reverberate, a son of 1995 Kentucky Derby and Belmont winner Thunder Gulch. Gary Stevens has the call on Chekhov.
Also entered are Robador, Sir Greeley, Mr Sword, Golden Man, Gorbash and Oratory.
Chekhov began his career with a second-place finish at Keeneland last October and then finished third in his next start, at Santa Anita. Moving into stakes company for the first time, Chekhov was fifth in the Sham Stakes, but just 2 ¾ lengths behind the winner, Going Wild. Giacomo was third in the race.
"He's a very good horse and we've been very high on him since the beginning," Biancone said. "I think the Sham was the best performance of his career. He was a maiden running in a stakes race that had the Kentucky Derby winner in it."
Like Chekhov, Oratory is a son of Pulpit but a less expensive one. Darley Stud bought him for $100,000 as a yearling. The colt has two wins and two seconds in four career starts — all this year.
"He's really matured over the last few months, and I think the time is right to test him against horses like these," trainer Tom Albertrani said.
BELMONT NOTES: Horse of the Year Ghostzapper is set for his 2005 debut in Monday's $750,000 Metropolitan Mile. Ghostzapper, trained by Bobby Frankel, won all four of his starts last year, including the Breeders' Cup Classic on Oct. 30 in his last start. ... Medallist, a winner of three stakes races and runner-up in the Carter Handicap last month, is out of the Met Mile with a cracked bone in his left front leg. ... On the Belmont front, Preakness runner-up Scrappy T, who veered into Afleet Alex and nearly knocked the winner off his feet at the top of the stretch, is a likely starter, owner Marshall Dowell says. ... Afleet Alex took to the Pimlico track for a third straight morning Friday, jogging two miles early and 1 ½ miles a few hours later. "Most horses would benefit from the same type of program, but unfortunately you can't do it with them," trainer Tim Ritchey said of the two-a-day workouts. "You have to have this kind of athlete."
Sunday, May 29, 2005
Oratory wins Peter Pan in stakes-record time
Oratory turned in a sharp performance as he seized control out of the turn and glided to a win in Saturday's $200,000 Peter Pan Stakes (G2) at Belmont Park, finishing the 1 1/8-mile test for three-year-olds in a stakes-record time of 1:46.35.Jockey Jerry Bailey rated the son of Pulpit close to early leader Reverberate and had Oratory well in hand throughout the early stages. When the Tom Albertrani-trained colt came around two wide on the turn, Bailey found another gear. Oratory responded by pulling away to a 4 3/4-length victory over a fast track for his first career stakes win.Reverberate held on for second, 6 1/2 lengths in front of Golden Man. The beaten favorite Chekhov, hoping for a good showing in preparation for the Belmont Stakes (G1), came in a disappointing fourth, well behind the leader."He finished very, very well," said Bailey. "I didn't intend to be on the lead, they just gave it to me. I watched all of his races, and he looked like a horse who hit his best stride in the last quarter of a mile. So, I figured, whatever they gave to me easiest was lengths I didn't have to make up at the end. He was impressive today.""Right from the beginning, he put himself in the race—which is unusual," Albertrani said. "He always likes to be a few lengths behind the leader. He never shows that much interest early on. He always has that late acceleration. He just accelerated away from them in the stretch."Albertani said he intends to consult with Oratory's owners before committing to the Belmont Stakes.With the Peter Pan victory, Darley Stable's Oratory, out of the Dehere mare Arrested Dreams, has improved to three wins in five starts and earnings of $189,000. He was bred by Louie Roussel III.
Saturday, May 28, 2005
Alex's Scheduled Arrival at Belmont Delayed
The suspected but unconfirmed case of strangles forced the quarantine of barn 60 at Belmont Park May 27 and the isolation of the filly, Lady Libby. Results of the tests, sent by overnight mail to the University of Illinois and to a local lab over the holiday weekend, will not be available until early next week.
Afleet Alex, owned by Cash is King Stable LLC, was slated to work at Belmont Tuesday morning. Instead, he will work at Pimlico, weather permitting.
"He might go six furlongs, but I'm not really sure of the distance yet," said trainer Tim Ritchey, who turned 54 Friday. "Mike Lakow (NYRA racing secretary) called me right away about the suspected strangles case, (for) which I am very appreciative. I can't take a shot shipping into New York right now with this horse and expose him to something. I talked to the people at Pimlico, and we'll stay here at least until Tuesday. By that time, NYRA will hopefully know what they are dealing with and have control of the situation."
The Tuesday breeze will be Afleet Alex's first workout since his memorable Preakness victory May 21 when he overcame a heel-clipping incident at the top of the stretch to win the second leg of the Triple Crown by 4 ¾ lengths over Scrappy T. He has been jogging since Wednesday.
