Monday, December 23, 2024
White Abarrio returns in Mr. Prospector . . .

    HALLANDALE BEACH - Gulfstream Park’s Championship Meet resumes Thursday, Dec. 26 with a 10-race program featuring two stakes and three turf races.

    The program begins at approximately 12:20 ET with Race 1, a maiden special weight event at five furlongs on the turf for 11 2-year-old fillies. The race includes two fillies from the barn of Mark Casse in Wellness and Baby Lala, JR Ranch’s Thankfully, Snitch Dorada, a daughter of Maximus Mischief to be ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr., and first-time starter Starship Impulsive from the barn of Steve Dwoskin.

    The $140,000 Rampart, for fillies and mares at a mile, will be run as Race 6 and feature a couple of Gr. 1 winners. Soul of an Angel makes her first start since winning the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint  while Gr. I Alabama winner Power Squeeze makes her first start since September when finishing seventh behind Thorpedo Anna in the Gr. I Cotillion Sept. 21 at Parx.

    Fillies and mares go 1 3/8 miles in the Via Borghese in Race 8. Forever After All and Marksman Queen go out after finishing second and third, respectively, in Del Mar’s Gr. III Red Carpet. Avenue Niel goes out first time for trainer Michael Trombetta after finishing fourth in the Gr. III Waya and Gr. III Long Island. La Mehana, winner of the Waya and seventh in the Long Island, goes out first time for trainer Christophe Clement. Graham Motion has entered Three Priests and Marskman Queen, out of the multiple graded stakes-winner Sharp Susan.


    Via Borghese, a daughter of Seattle Dancer trained by Angel Penna Jr., won 11 of 22 starts and was a multiple graded stakes-winner on the turf.

White Abarrio to Meet 11 in Gr. III Mr. Prospector 

    White Abarrio, winner of the 2023 Breeders’ Cup Classic and 2022 Florida Derby, will face a full field Saturday in the $165,000 Mr. Prospector at seven furlongs. Trained by Saffie Joseph Jr., White
Abarrio worked a ‘bullet’ three furlongs Sunday :35.42. The field includes three-time Gr. III winner Super Chow and Gr. III Vosburgh winner Mufasa.

    Saturday’s 11-race program also includes the $115,000 Abundantia for fillies and mares at five furlongs on the turf, and the $100,000 St. Augustine at 1 1/16 miles on the Tapeta.

    The first of the weekend’s Tropical Turf Pick 3 wagers begins Friday with Race 1, a $25,000 maiden claimer for 2-year-olds going 7 ½ furlongs. Leading trainer Joseph saddles two in Salto Angel, seventh in his debut on Tapeta, and first-time starter Chill the J. Change At Jamaica gets blinkers and drops in company off a ninth-place finish in his debut for trainer Mark Casse.

    The second leg of the Tropical Turf Pick 3 is Race 6, a $35,000 claiming event for fillies and mares. Miss Taptress broke her maiden on the turf and was third over the green last time out at this level. Sassy Allie has a win and two seconds in four turf starts for trainer Robert Falcone Jr. The Pick 3 concludes with Race 9, a starter allowance for fillies and mares at 1 1/16 miles. Sarah’s Dream, trained by Jose D’Angelo, is on a four-race winning streak, with one of those being over the turf. Silver Moonlight, trained by Joseph, is seeking her third consecutive victory over the green.

Thursday, December 19, 2024
One of 5 stakes at Gulfstream Saturday . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Growing up on Long Island, Michael Lerman used to see older horses running “routinely” at New York tracks. Later, while attending the University of Miami in the 1980s, Lerman recalls going to Calder Race Course and watching stakes-winners Gun Deck and Reuben’s Grand competing at the age of nine and 10.

    So, it makes Lerman proud that Clear Stars Stable’s Xy Speed is “hitting his stride” at the end of his 8-year-old season as he prepares for Saturday’s $140,000 Janus Stakes, a five-furlong turf test and one of five stakes totaling $750,000 on Pegasus Preview Day at Gulfstream Park.

    First race post is 12:20 for the 11-race program which includes the Gr. III Harlan’s Holiday, a prep for the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational, and the $215,000, Gr. II Fort Lauderdale, a prep for the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational Turf, both on Saturday, Jan. 25. The Janus will also begin Saturday’s Tropical Turf Pick
3.

    Claimed by Clear Stars Stable for $32,000 in August of 2022, Xy Speed has aged well. Under Lerman’s care, the son of First Samurai has become a multiple stakes-winner and will be one of the top choices in the 12-horse field.

    “It’s solid race,” Lerman said. “Most of the live sprinters are in there. He is doing extremely well. He’s at the top of his game at the end of his 8-year-old year, and that’s really quite nice to see. It’s a tribute to him that he’s hit his best stride. It shows if you have patience, and if you take care of them, you have a chance to bring out their ability.”


    Xy Speed won three consecutive turf sprints in the spring at Gulfstream before heading north, where he finished fourth, beaten only a neck, in the Select Stakes at Monmouth, and then seventh in the Gr. II Woodford at Keeneland. He returned to Gulfstream and promptly picked up where he left off before leaving, winning on Nov. 8 in an allowance optional claimer.

    Lerman said Xy Speed had excuses in both out-of-town races. “At Monmouth, an hour and a half before the race, it was a monsoon,” he said. “He likes it rock hard. It’s a tribute to him he was only beaten a length. At Keeneland he had significant trouble.”


    Xy Speed, who will be ridden by Emisael Jaramillo, has a couple of advantages working for him going into the Janus. In 14 starts at Gulfstream he has seven wins and has failed to finish third or better only twice. He’s also a horse who has learned to race off the pace.  “I really liked that he’s settled,” Lerman said. “Earlier in his career he seemed like he wanted to be on the pace. But we got him to settle and relax and he had a couple nice wins in the late spring, and as he’s gotten sharper and healthier and more confident in himself, he kind of wants to revert to laying closer. There’s a ton of speed in the race. I think he really does his best when he’s running at them. He’s got the ability to run a sub-11 eighth, which is a pretty handy turn of foot.”

    The Janus is a wide-open event with eight of the dozen entered being 12-1 or under on the morning line. The favorite is Sonata Stable’s Arzak, third in the Woodford before finishing sixth, beaten less than two lengths, in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint. Irad Ortiz Jr. is named to ride
.

    D J Stables’ Masseto breaks from the rail for trainer Mark Casse and jockey Javier Castellano. The gelded son of Territories is undefeated in three starts at the distance and has four wins on the turf in nine starts. Trainer Brad Cox has entered two in Yes I Am Free and That’s Right. Yes I Am Free goes out for the Cox barn for the first time. The speedy Uncaptured gelding is 9-for-22 on Gulfstream’s course and has 10 wins from 27 turf races. Junior Alvarado will ride. That’s Right, blinkers off, was second in the Parx Dash and Wolf Hill over the summer.

    David Fawkes has entered Reef Runner, a winner of the Bob Umphrey Turf Sprint on the all-weather Tapeta here in September, while leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. sends out Axthelm, third in the Gr. III Turf Sprint at Kentucky Downs in September, and Okiro
.
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
Capture both Sire Stakes at Tampa . . .

    Stephen Rousseau’s Nic’s Style (Uncaptured – Sense When) tracked the leaders from the inside in the $100,000 City Of Ocala Florida Sire Stakes, battled to the lead a furlong out and was best by 2-1/2 lengths at the wire.

    That’s two straight stakes wins for the 4-year-old Florida-bred graded stakes-placed daughter of Uncaptured, purchased by Stephen Rousseau for $25,000 out of the Summerfield consignment at the 2021 October Yearling Sale. She’s trained by Bill Mott and is now 6-5-1-0 with $328,400 in earnings.

    Daniel L. Walters and Dennis G. Smith’s Big Martini (The Big Beast – Dirty Martini) scored his first stakes win with a frontrunning two length victory in in the $100,000 Marion County Florida Sire Stakes. Rohan Crichton trains the 4-year-old Florida-bred son of The Big Beast, now 18-4-6-2 with $268,308 in earnings.

    He’s a two-time OBS graduate, sold first at the 2021 Winter Mixed Sale and then purchased for $87,000 out of the Blue River Bloodstock consignment at the 2022 June Sale after turning in an Under Tack eighth in :10 1/5.   

    Stonestreet Stables and Peter Leidel’s Blue Fire (Aurelius Maximus – Mystic Blue) went to the front in Saturday’s $100,000 Louisiana Champions Day Lassie Stakes at Fair Grounds, was headed from the inside past the eighth pole, then came again to score by a head.

    It’s the first stakes victory for the 2-year-old daughter of Aurelius Maximus, trained by Steve Asmussen, now 3-2-0-0 with $95,120 in earnings. She was purchased for $32,000 out of the Kaizen Sales consignment at the 2023 OBS Winter Mixed Sale.

Monday, December 16, 2024
Rainbow jackpot returns $489,592 . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - The 20-cent Rainbow 6 was solved by one lucky bettor for a life-changing jackpot payout of $489,592 after 5-year-old mare Center Stage ($58) sprung a 25-1 upset in the Race 10 finale Sunday at Gulfstream Park.

    It marked the first time the multi-race wager has been hit during the 2024-2025 Championship Meet, which opened Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28. The Rainbow 6 had gone unsolved for 11 days following a Nov. 24 mandatory payout.

    The winning combination was 5-1-2-3-7-7. Other winners in the sequence were Mish ($4.60), Art Fair ($8.80), Love Mami Love ($8.60), Union Trail ($8.60) and Morgan Point ($31).

    The Rainbow 6 begins anew spanning Races 3-9 when the Championship Meet resumes on Thursday.
 
Sunday, December 15, 2024
Wins 5 races, including 2 stakes . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - West Point Thoroughbreds’ Cugino provided jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. with his fifth winner, as well as a stakes sweep, on Saturday’s program at Gulfstream Park, surging through the stretch to capture the $140,000 Tropical Park Derby.

    Three races earlier on an 11-race program, Ortiz guided See You Around to victory in the $140,000 Tropical Park Oaks, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for 3-year-old fillies.

    “It feels great just to have the opportunity to ride these kinds of horses, nice horses like today and all week. I like to ride any horses, claiming horses, I don’t really care. I’m just happy to ride,” said Ortiz, who is seeking his third-straight Championship Meet title and sixth overall. “The trainers and owners give me the right opportunities and support me big time. I just thank God to keep me healthy and be able to keep doing what I love.”

    Cugino ($5.40) needed a perfectly executed ride from Ortiz to prevail by a neck over late-rallying 40-1 outsider Full Nelson in the Tropical Park Derby, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for 3-year-olds.

    “He got him in position on the first turn. I liked the way he was able to wait, and when the hole opened, he really kicked,” Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey said.

    Cugino broke cleanly from his No. 10 post in the 12-horse event before Ortiz deftly dropped the son of Twirling Candy to the rail in sixth behind a pacesetting Fidelightcayut, who was stalked to his outside by Silent Heart, the even-money favorite. Fidelightcayut set solid fractions of :22.51 and :46.73 seconds for the first half mile and continued to lead on the far turn.

    Edgar Perez asked Silent Heart for his run on the turn into the homestretch, and the Brian Lynch trainee responded to take the lead at the top of the stretch as Ortiz bided his time for a hole to open up. Silent Heart appeared on his way to victory when a hole finally opened for Cugino in mid-stretch. Ortiz swung him off the rail and he surged through the late yards to eke out a victory while holding Full Nelson safe.

    “I wanted to get a good position going into the first turn and I went for it without thinking twice. I used him a little bit to get position and that’s all I wanted to do. I was worried about the post position more than anything. I know I was on the right horse,” Ortiz said. “Going into the first turn I used him a little more than I wanted to, but I ended up in a beautiful spot and after that, everything worked out beautiful. I turned for home and it opened up and I was able to get clear without a problem, and he gave me a good kick down the lane.”

    Cugino ran 1 1/16-miles in 1:39.32 over a firm turf. Full Nelson finished a neck ahead of Silent Heart.

    Cugino, who lost a neck decision in last season’s $200,000 Colonel Liam at Gulfstream, finished second in the Gr. III Hill Prince at Aqueduct in his prior start. The Tropical Park Derby is Cugino’s second stakes win.

    “He’s just had some unlucky trips. Several times in the spring and here when he got beat in the Colonel Liam,” said McGaughey, who is thinking about giving Cugino a break after his big race Saturday.


    “I just wanted to run him one more time after the [Hill Prince]. I thought about the Hollywood Derby, but this was in our backyard. All we had to do was put the bridle on him and lead him over,” McGaughey said.