Saturday, March 21, 2026
9 set to go in 75th running . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Michael and Katherine Ball’s Chief Wallabee, the Coolmore Fountain of Youth (G2) runner-up last month in just his second start, was installed as the narrow 2-1 program favorite over eight rivals during Saturday’s post-position draw for the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) presented by Hill ‘n’ Dale Farms at Xalapa March 28 at Gulfstream Park.

    The 75th running of the 1 1/8-mile Florida Derby for 3-year-olds, which debuted in 1952 and has produced the winners of a remarkable 63 Triple Crown races, offers 200 qualifying points for the May 2 Kentucky Derby (G1) to the top five finishers on a 100-50-25-15-10 basis.

    A total of 10 stakes, five graded, worth $2.675 million in purses comprise a blockbuster 14-race Florida Derby Day program with a post time of 11:30 a.m. ET


    The Florida Derby will feature three of the top four horses on Daily Racing Form’s Derby Watch list – Chief Wallabee, Commandment and Nearly, respectively ranked second, third and fourth. Another Florida Derby contender, The Puma, is ranked 12th on the DRF list of 20, which mirrors the maximum number of Kentucky Derby starters.

    Chief Wallabee will break from Post 2 under jockey Junior Alvarado, aboard for both of the bay son of 2014 Florida Derby winner Constitution’s two races. They came from off the pace to win a seven-furlong maiden special weight in debut Jan. 10, then rallied from far back to be beaten a neck in the 1 1/16-mile Fountain of Youth Feb. 28 while trying two turns for the first time.

    Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott is seeking his first win in the Florida Derby. He ran second last year with eventual champion 3-year-old male and Horse of the Year Sovereignty.

    Wathnan Racing’s Commandment, the Fountain of Youth winner trained by Brad Cox, is second on the morning line at 5-2. By Into Mischief, he graduated in his second start last fall in Kentucky before a popular 6 ¾-length victory in Gulfstream’s Mucho Macho Man going a one-turn mile Jan. 3.

    Tappan Street’s mild upset of Sovereignty last year gave Cox his first win in the Florida Derby. Flavien Prat is set to ride Commandment, the 5-2 second program choice, from Post 4.

    Like Commandment, Centennial Farms’ Nearly takes a three-race win streak into the Florida Derby. Sixth in his unveiling last fall at Aqueduct, the Not This Time colt is undefeated at Gulfstream starting with a maiden triumph over Florida-breds in November. He then beat winners Jan. 2 and romped in the 1 1/16-mile Holy Bull (G3) Jan. 31 in his two-turn debut, his three wins coming by 20 combined lengths. He is rated third choice on the morning line at 3-1.

    Nearly breezed four furlongs in 49.16 seconds Saturday at Palm Beach Downs, fastest of 16 horses. He will break from Post 6 under Hall of Famer John Velazquez, whose six Florida Derby victories are the most of any rider. Each of them have come for Nearly’s Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, who owns a record eight wins in the Florida Derby.

    OGMA Investments, JR Ranch and High Step Racing’s The Puma (9-2 ML), trained by Gustavo Delgado, hails from similar connections that saw Mage run second in the 2023 Florida Derby ahead of his victory in the Kentucky Derby. He ran second to Chief Wallabee at Gulfstream in his unveiling, then ran third in the Sam F. Davis before his upset victory in the March 7 Tampa Bay Derby (G3), both going 1 1/16 miles.

    The Puma worked five furlongs in 1:01.80 Saturday over Gulfstream’s main track, ranking eighth of 21 horses. Hall of Famer Javier Castellano gets the riding assignment from Post 8.

     Baalbek Corp.’s Wayne’s Law (15-1 ML), a son of 2020 Florida Derby winner Tiz the Law trained by Amador Sanchez, most recently finished second to Renegade in the Feb. 7 Sam Davis, 2 ¼ lengths ahead of The Puma. He made his first three career starts at Gulfstream, beating Florida-bred maidens second time out and subsequently winning the open one-mile Aventura in September. Marcos Meneses will ride from Post 3.

    Leon Ellman, Glassman Racing and Laurie Plesa’s Timeless Victory (20-1 ML) has made six starts for trainer Ed Plesa Jr., all at Gulfstream. The last three have come on dirt with two wins including a six-length optional claiming allowance triumph going 1 1/8 miles March 1, and a third behind Nearly Jan. 2.

    Timeless Victory breezed four furlongs in 49.31 seconds over Gulfstream’s main track Saturday. He will have the services of regular rider Jose Morelos from Post 7.

    JC Racing Stable’s Gregarious (50-1 ML), owned and trained by Jose Castro, will be making just his second career start in the Florida Derby having run second in his Feb. 21 debut, a 1 1/8-mile maiden special weight at Gulfstream. He breezed four furlongs in 49.35 seconds Saturday at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream’s satellite training facility in Palm Beach County, and will break from Post 9 with jockey Rajiv Maragh.

    Completing the field are Pin Oak Stud’s Albus (Post 1, 20-1ML), a last-out maiden winner going one mile and 40 yards Feb. 27 at Tampa Bay Downs that worked a half-mile in 49.75 seconds Saturday at Palm Meadows; and Calypso Racing Stables’ Redland Rebels (Post 5, 15-1 ML), second by a neck in Gulfstream’s Jan. 31 Kitten’s Joy on the grass that was subsequently fourth in the Tampa Bay Derby and will be cross-entered in the Arkansas Derby (G1) on the same day, according to trainer Patrick Biancone.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Equals March record with 7 million-dollar sales . . .

    The success Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co. graduate Yaupon enjoyed with his first crop of runners in 2025 was enough to catch the eye of one of the more noted bloodstock agents in the thoroughbred industry. It also helped contribute to a bit of history being made inside the sales pavilion where the son of Uncle Mo first made his mark.

    When the dust settled on the OBS March Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale a year ago, a  milestone for top-end success had been established as seven horses sold for seven figures during the auction, the most ever for an OBS March sale. When the 2026 edition of the sale concluded its three-day run on March 12, another illustrious chapter had been added to the annals as it delivered a record March gross and equaled the OBS March record with seven horses crossing the million-dollar threshold.

    After having six horses reach the seven-figure stratosphere during the first two days of the sale, Hip 576, a bay colt by Yaupon consigned by King’s Equine, became the final horse to bust through that lofty barrier when he was purchased by agent Donato Lanni on behalf of the “Three Amigos,” also known as the ownership trio of Michael Pegram, Karl Watson, and Paul Weitman.

    That final exclamation point put a stamp on a sale that continues to build upon the breadth and depth of buying power showcased a year ago. The overall gross of $72,050,000 from 443 head sold at the close of business Thursday surpassed the previous March record of $71,473,500 from 464 sold, established in 2023. In addition to hitting that mark and besting the total gross of $65,660,500 generated by 432 sold in 2025, the cumulative average of $162,641 surpassed the 2025 figure of $151,992, with the median improving from $70,000 last year to $85,000 this season.

    “Very gratified and pleased and happy for the consignors,” said Tod Wojciechowski, Director of Sales for OBS. “As I say all the time, they bring the horses and it’s the quality of the horses they bring is that brings those prices. Very pleased with the amount of trade that took place all three days, both domestically and internationally. We had involvement from a lot of different buyers, so we were very happy with that. What we saw early on proved out in the sale prices and proved out over the last three days.”

    At the close of business Thursday, a total of 123 horses failed to meet their reserve, resulting in an RNA rate of 21.7% compared to 17.6% in 2025.

    Wednesday’s session saw Hip 372, a bay filly by Nyquist consigned by Wavertree Stables (Ciaran Dunne), top the auction when she sold for $2 million to representatives of Boyd Racing. That final bid put the filly, who breezed in :9 3/5, in a three-way tie for the honor of being the second-highest priced horse to sell at an OBS March sale - second only to Brant who brought a record $3 million last year – joining Muth (2023) and Chestertown (2019).

    “(Buying) has been so tough, we knew we’d have to stretch for her,” said Hannah Jennings of Killora Stud after signing the ticket on behalf of Boyd Racing for the Nyquist filly. “We never thought we’d have to stretch that far but when the horse is the right one, everyone is on them.”

    The Nyquist filly highlighted a Wavertree consignment that sold 13 head for a sales-leading gross of $7,730,000.

    After witnessing the precocity showcased by Yaupon’s offspring on the track, Lanni stretched a fair amount himself to land Thursday’s session-leading son of the Spendthrift stallion. Yaupon was the leading first-crop sire of 2025 and the speed that was his trademark was flaunted by Hip 576 when the colt breezed in :9 4/5 during the under-tack show.

    “He was beautiful, fast, and sound. He came out of the work really well,” said Lanni, who added the colt would head to California. “These horses, they have to do it here and they have to do everything right. And he was a horse who did well. We love the sire. Big Yaupon fan. They’re precocious they’re quick, they look really forward. (Yaupon) had a good year last year. We were on the sidelines last year, we watched. But we’re getting in now.”

    The colt is out of the Lemon Drop Kid mare Balbina, who is a daughter of multiple graded stakes-winner Ready’s Gal and a half-sister to graded stakes-winner Machen.

    “He’s a beautiful horse, he’s got everything people want on a horse,” Raul Reyes of King’s Equine said of the colt. “He really looks good and he’s very fast, that helps too. We felt he would probably bring seven figures and he barely made it, but he made it.”

    Lanni also signed the ticket for the second highest priced horse to sell during Thursday’s session, Hip 694, a daughter of Constitution that he purchased for $800,000 on behalf of owner Frank Fletcher. Consigned by de Meric Sales, the filly breezed in :10 flat during the under-tack show and is out of the winning Curlin mare Curls and Bows, who is a half-sister to Gr. 1 winner Dearest Trickski.

    Fletcher led all buyers by gross with two horses purchased for $2,650,000. He also purchased the sale’s second highest priced horse, Hip 416, a bay colt by OBS March graduate and leading sire Into Mischief, who elicited a final bid of $1.85 million and became the first seven-figure horse ever sold by Susan Montanye’s S B M Training and Sales consignment.

    “The other thing that I think was noteworthy is… a lot of the younger consignors are becoming a bigger and bigger part of the sales as we lose people like Eddie Woods,” Wojciechowski said. “We see these younger consignors starting to grow more and more within the industry.”

    The sale also featured the first 2-year-olds by champion Flightline, and Hip 698, a daughter of the Lane’s End stallion, produced the third-highest price of the third and final session when she sold for $775,000 to Hideyuki Mori. Consigned by Wavertree Stables (Ciaran Dunne), the filly breezed in :10 flat and is out of Gr. 1 winner Dalika (GER), a daughter of Pastorius (GER).

Other notable prices on the day included:

    Hip 683, a gray or roan ridgling by Epicenter consigned by King's Equine who sold for $560,000 to William K Werner. The colt, who breezed in :9 4/5, is out of the Lemon Drop Kid mare Copper Quest, who is a half-sister to graded stakes-winner Copper Bullet.

    Hip 671, a bay colt by Nashville consigned by Twelve Toes LLC who sold for $525,000 to
St. Elias Stable. The colt, who breezed in :10 flat, is out of the winning Tapit mare Closet Shopper and hails from the female family of Gr. 1 winner Sweet Lulu.

    Thursday’s session finished with a gross of $19,396,500 from 130 head sold, down from the $25,161,500 generated by 152 sold during the third session in 2025. The session average of $169,204 was up over the $165,536 posted last year while the session median improved from $61,000 in 2025 to $77,500.

    There were 47 horses who failed to meet their reserve during the final session, resulting in an RNA rate of 26.5%, compared to 15.5% during the corresponding session a year ago
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Sunday, March 15, 2026
Unsearchable wins at Gulfstream . . .

    HALLANDALE BEACH - Jeff Kerber’s 3-year-old homebred colt Unsearchable, making her second career start, came with a steady run through the stretch and edged clear of Triple Crown-nominated Final Story late to give trainer George ‘Rusty’ Arnold II his 2,000th career victory Saturday at Gulfstream.

    Ridden by jockey Jorge Ruiz, also up for Unsearchable’s Feb. 7 unveiling at Gulfstream, the son of Not This Time ($5.80) ran seven furlongs on a fast main track in 1:22.97 to win the maiden special weight for 3-year-olds by a half-length.

    Unsearchable was the lone starter of the day, 26th of the Championship Meet and third winner for Arnold, who turns 71 on March 26. He picked up win No. 1,999 with 3-year-old filly To a Flame March 7 at Gulfstream.

    “We’ve stood the test of time. It’s been a long haul and then the last month it got really slow. It’s great. It’s very exciting that I got there,” Arnold said. “Good horses keep you going. They make you wake up a little more excited. This is one of them, I think.”

    A native of Paris, Ky., Arnold celebrated the milestone victory in the winner’s circle with his wife, Sarah, a former exercise rider who has been his long-time assistant.

    “She’s the backbone of the operation. She’s been there for them all, just about,” Arnold said. “I’ve had a bunch of really, really good assistants and been very, very lucky. Good owners, good assistants and a great wife that oversees it all and steadies me when I need steadying.”

    Arnold has banked nearly $92.4 million in purse earnings from 13,623 starters since going out on his own in 1975. He has reached seven figures in purses earned in 40 of the last 41 years, reaching a career high of $5,603,177 in 2025.

    “Fortunately for us, it got really good now. A lot of it doesn’t happen when you’re my age,” he said. “It kind of tips off the hill, and the last three years have been the best three years we’ve ever had. It kind of keeps you going.”

    A third-generation horseman, Arnold’s father co-owned Fair Acres Farm where he bred horses to race and sell. Arnold’s brother, Terry, works at WinStar Farm.

    Growing up, Arnold worked on the family farm during weekends and summers. He galloped for trainer Eugene Euster while taking pre-veterinary courses at the University of Kentucky, working his way up to assistant trainer before going out on his own.

    In 1985, Arnold was named to train a division of John Ed Anthony’s Loblolly Stable replacing eventual Hall of Famer Shug McGaughey. In recent years he has had success training for owner G. Watts Humphrey Jr.

    Arnold earned the first of his 108 graded stakes victories with The Wheel Turns in the 1982 Barbara Fritchie (G2) at Bowie Race Course in Maryland. Later that year, Wavering Monarch gave him his first Gr. 1 win in the Haskell Invitational at Monmouth Park.

    Other Gr. 1 success for Arnold has come in the 2025 and 2001 Test, 2019 Belmont Oaks Invitational, 2017 and 1997 Spinster, 2016 and 2012 Ashland, 2013 Jenny Wiley, 2010 Maker’s Mark Mile, 2007 Breeders’ Futurity, 1996 Shuvee, 1993 Nassau County Handicap, 1990 Top Flight Handicap, 1989 Demoiselle, 1988 Futurity and 1986 Brooklyn.

    Arnold has trained seven millionaires, led by two-time graded stakes-winner Gear Jockey ($1.6 million). Last fall, he became the all-time leading trainer at Keeneland with his 309th victory, one more than Hall of Famer Bill Mott. 

    “Becoming the all-time leading trainer at Keeneland was big for me. I grew up there,” Arnold said. “You always think about the first graded stake you won. There’s a lot of things to sit back and reflect on. Fifty-one years I’ve been lucky enough to do this. To come to work and do this job for 51 years, it doesn’t happen much.”

Wednesday, March 11, 2026
21-year-old won Santa Anita Handicap . . .

    HALLANDALE BEACH - Jockey Diego Herrera called his victory aboard British Isles in the Santa Anita Handicap Saturday “the big daddy.”

    Having now won his first Gr. 1 race, the 21-year-old rider is ready for more success.

    After riding British Isles in the Pegasus World Cup Invitational in January at Gulfstream Park and “enjoying the atmosphere,” Herrera has decided to leave the left coast for South Florida and Gulfstream. He will be represented by agent Kevin Meyocks.

    “I’m trying to seek more opportunities to ride and get more experience,” said Herrera, who has won 257 races since 2021 through Saturday. “Things can get light out here sometimes, a lot of smaller fields. I went to Gulfstream to ride British Isles in the Pegasus, and I liked the atmosphere, I liked Gulfstream, and I spoke to Kevin and it seemed like something I’d like to try.”

     It’s a big move for Herrera, who was born in Inglewood, California and has been around horses all his life. He won the 2025 Cecil B. DeMille (G3) aboard Unrivaled Time and the 2024 Autumn Miss (G3) on Watchtower.

    “I was riding ponies at probably 6 years old, quarter horses around 12 and I got licensed at 15 ? to ride,” Herrera said. “I love the sport. I’m due to get in around March 19 and we’ll see what happens. I’m really looking forward to it."

Sunday, March 8, 2026
Earns 50 qualifying points for 1st Saturday in May . . .

By Lynne Snierson

    OLDSMAR - The Puma stalked the field of nine talented 3-year-olds and then pounced in the lane to capture the 46th running of the Gr. III, $400,000 ESMARK Tampa Bay Derby at Tampa Bay Downs on Saturday and advance on The Road to the Kentucky Derby. 

    With the victory, The Puma jumped from the maiden ranks into the second spot on the Kentucky Derby leaderboard by earning 50 qualifying points to add to the six points he had acquired from his third-place finish in the listed Sam F. Davis on this track in his previous start on February 7. The Sam Davis is the traditional prep race for the Tampa Bay Derby. 

    "We're a small barn. We have to scout, we have to buy the horses. It's more gratifying when you only get one or two horses at the sale and they end up like this. It's very satisfying. I'm very pleased. It's not an easy thing when you enter a maiden in a stakes race. People think what are they doing? It's a good thing when they respond on the track," Gustavo Delgado Jr., the assistant trainer to his father, Gustavo Delgado Sr., told America's Best Racing from the winner's circle. "From the first time he ran, I said that this is a very good horse and I kept telling everyone." 

    The Puma, who was ridden by Javier Castellano, broke alertly from the far outside post and settled off the pace as the field continued up the backside while 38-1 longshot Redland Rebels under Junior Alvarado set splits of :23.07 and :46.48 for the first half-mile in the 1 1/16 miles test over the fast main track.

    The Puma steadily advanced while commencing his bid on the far turn and by the time he reached the leaders at the top of the lane, he put his head in front. He dueled through the lane with Further Ado and the $1.50-1 favorite Canaletto, who was ridden by Flavien Prat, and then edged clear by three-quarters of a length in the final time of 1:43.23 to the delight of the on-track crowd of 9,070.

    Further Ado, trained by Brad Cox and ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr., was the runner-up and  Chad-Brown trained Canaletto finished a head behind him.

    "Everybody was trying to save ground and there was a lot of traffic to get there from the outside post (No. 8). From there it's really hard to go all the way to the inside. Nobody spilt up. I was tracking Canaletto with Prat all the way.  I really like my horse and what he did and the way he did it. He ran really good," said Castellano, who took the 2016 Tampa Bay Derby with Destin. "With three-year-olds, you have to give them a chance to develop. In his first race he got beat by a really good horse. In the second race (the Sam Davis) it was his first time around turn turns. He started to figure it out today. When he got rolling, he did what he was supposed to do. I like the way he finished."

    Canaletto, who was a $1 million yearling buy for Coolmore, Peter Brant and Brook T. Smith, was also attempting to handle the class hike from the maiden ranks. In his only previous effort he was an eight-length winner in a maiden special weight at Gulfstream Park on Jan. 25 under Prat.

    "He was looking around. He never really traveled. They went fast and I was in deep water from the gate," said Prat. Then he made a run, surprisingly, and I thought he was going to make a run at the three-eighths pole. He was brave enough to make a run, but I never really felt that I was traveling well."

    Spendthrift Farm's Further Ado picked up 25 Kentucky Derby points by finishing second to add to the 10 points already in his column, and Canaletto earned 15 points. Redland Rebels took home 10 points to get on the Triple Crown Trail and Talkin garnered 5 points to bring his total to 10. Powershift, representing Repole Stable and trainer Todd Pletcher; Thunder Buck, making his first start for trainer Brendan Walsh after competing three times for Brad Cox; Hulkamania, who is owned in part by former Major Leage Baseball Jayson Werth's Icon Racing Stables; and Smith Ranch Stables Roger That Dana completed the order of finish. 

    The Puma, who is by Essential Quality and the Declaration of War mare Eve of War, was bred in Kentucky by Hidden Brook Farm and Brain Kahn and is owned by the partnership of OGMA Investments, JR Ranch, and High Strep Racing. OGMA Investments campaigned Mage, winner of the 2023 Kentucky Derby, and now they have another colt to take them back to Churchill Downs on the first Saturday in May.

    "From the beginning (with The Puma) I said, 'Let's get everything'. Right now, it makes sense," said Delgado Jr.

    The Puma, dispatched at $7.40-1, rewarded his backers with $16.80 for the $2 win wager and picked up $210,000 from the purse for his efforts to increase his earnings to $244,280. 

    The Festival 46 Day crowd supported the enthusiastic crowd by betting $757,139 on track and the intra-state wagering total was another $441,601. The total inter-state handle was another $13,964,047.

    In the undercard stakes, the Gr. II, $225,000 Hillsborough for older fillies and mares at 1 1/8 miles on the green, Destino D'Oro proved she's not just good, she's gutsy as she overcame a troubled trip to triumph in a five-horse blanket rush to the finish and assert her dominance in her division.

    The 4-year-old daughter of Bolt d'Oro and Heart of Destiny by Lion Heart showed that she has the heart of  a lion after getting stopped at the half-mile pole but then gathering herself to execute a huge run from far back under Junior Alvarado. She rallied down the lane to get her nose in front of short-priced favorite Whiskey Decision at the wire in the final time of 1:52.18 on a "good" course. Proctor Street was third by a neck. 

    "I had a great trip all the way through to the half-mile pole. The horse that was in front I couldn't even see. I'm thinking he's the (number) One (Whiskey Decision, under Flavien Prat) and he's going to close the door. He came out right in the position where I was and made me lose three, four spots right there. Then I thought I was okay, but this is over. But she just kept coming and coming. She's a very good horse. She's a very good filly. I'm very excited for her because today was the trip for her to get beat, 100 percent. She came out with a run, and she put herself and myself in the winner's circle," Alvarado said. 

    Destino D'Oro took the Gr. II  Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf at Gulfstream Park in her last and is now a three-time graded stakes-winner with six wins in nine starts. She is trained by Brad Cox for Steve Landers Racing.

    Cox, who witnessed his charge Further Ado take second in the Tampa Bay Derby later on the card, drove the 200 miles to the track from Payson Park Training Center in South Florida after breezing 18 horses in the morning.

    “I'm very proud of the filly. I want to congratulate Steve Landers, big win. She’s tough, obviously she showed that today from the half-mile pole home, kind of getting checked out of it a little bit and circling, no pace. It was a question mark with the turf [condition] if she would like it, but I think she’s just honest. She shows up and runs hard when she’s doing well," Cox said. 

    Child of the Moon, And One More Time, Scythian, and Aunt Mo rounded out the order of finish. Dreaming of Abba was scratched. 

    Kentucky-bred Destino d' Oro, sent postward as the 3-1 second pick in the field of eight, paid $8.00 to win and upped her career earnings to $949,884, including the $120,000 winner's share of the purse.

    Cox said, “I loved her last spring and summer, and last fall, she wasn’t doing bad, she just wasn’t doing quite as good as she is now. No reason to stop on her, we kept her ticking over and she got on a roll in December at Gulfstream and she’s been rolling. I wasn’t sure about running here, but her last two works at Payson have been very good and I thought, you know, we’ll just fill the calendar with this race and then maybe look at the Jenny Wiley at Keeneland.”

    Tagermeen Racing's Dandona made her first foray into stakes company a winning one as she rallied from the back of the pack to best a field of 10 other three-year-old fillies to capture the Gr. III , $200,000 Florida Oaks in her third career outing for trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. 

    Under a confident ride by Flavien Prat, she waited patiently behind a fast pace and then made a bold move on the far turn of the 1 1/16 miles test over a turf course rated as "good" before the pace picked up. Dandona stormed down the lane while inhaling the fillies in front of her and crossed the wire in the final time of 1:44.71. Time to Dream was 1 1/4 lengths behind with Irad Ortiz Jr. aboard and the $1.80-1 favorite Kokomotion, who led earlier in the race under John Velazquez, faded to third.

    Said Prat, "She broke well and it felt like the pace was too hot for her so I gave her a chance. It didn't feel like she wanted to be up in the race. She was traveling good considering the soft ground and I was able to get her outside and get her going and she showed up. I felt the pace was fair enough. I gave her a chance and she was grinding away."

    Laigina, Abigail, Bossy Candy, Special Wood, Alone Time, Backgammon, Bramble Blast, and Courageous Diane followed the leaders home.

    Dandona is a Kentucky-bred daughter of Tiz the Law out of Tulsa Queen by Cactus Ridge. Her record is now 3-2-0-1 and her lifetime earnings are $121,000. 
*
    In the 20th running of the $125,000 Columbia Stakes, DJ Stables homebred Alpyland won his fourth race and second stakes on the grass in his last five tries when he easily dispensed with seven other sophomores for trainer Mark Casse.

    Alpyland, a gelded son of Vekoma who was piloted by Javier Castellano, relished the slight cutback in distance to one mile from his last effort, a third place run in the 1 1/16 miles Kittens Joy at Gulfstream. Rated patiently while longshot Knick's honor set pedestrian fractions of :23.23 and :48.20 for the first half-mile, Alpyland responded to his cue from Castellano coming out of the turn and kicked clear through the lane to win by a comfortable two lengths in the final time of 1:37.61 on a turf course rated good. Proton was second, a neck in front of Knoty Knicks.

    "I really liked the distance. We pointed to this race. A mile, I think, is perfect for the horse. He's got plenty of speed, but he sat beautiful behind the two pace-making horse. I like the way he relaxed on the backside and the way he developed within himself. Every time I asked him, he was there. Turning for home, he exploded. I think he's a really nice horse," Castellano said. 

The winning trainer agreed with his rider. Said Casse by phone from Oaklawn Park, "That was a very nice effort from him. He did that pretty nicely. He's a horse that we liked a lot early on and he's turned out to be nice. It's just taken him a while to get his act together, but he's a pretty good turf horse now. We're probably going to go next with him to Churchill Downs for the American Turf Classic, it's for a million dollars and a Grade 1 on (Kentucky) Derby Day. We hope this horse has a bright future and we're keeping our fingers crossed."

    Out of the Kela mare Il Brigante, Alpyland was bred in Kentucky by his owner and improved his record to 8-4-0-2 while upping his bankroll to $271,596 with the $60,000 winner's cut
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