Brown sends talented triumvirate in search of fourth G1 Diana win
NYRA NEWS RELEASE —-
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Two-time Eclipse Award winner Chad Brown will hold a strong hand on Saturday at Saratoga Race Course as he seeks his fourth training victory in the Grade 1, $500,000 Diana for fillies and mares on the grass with an accomplished trio of Sistercharlie, A Raving Beauty, and New Money Honey.
The 80th running of the 1 1/8-mile Diana, the first Grade 1 of American racing’s premier 40-day meet, will be joined on Saturday by the Grade 3, $150,000 Sanford for 2-year-olds. Both races will be televised live on a special, extended edition of Saratoga Live, presented by Claiborne Farm, airing on FS2, MSG+, FOX Sports Prime Ticket, Fox Sports San Diego and Altitude Sports from 4-7 p.m. ET. Local post time is 5:22 for the Sanford (Race 9) and 5:55 for the Diana (Race 10).
Peter M. Brant’s Sistercharlie will be cutting back in distance on the Mellon turf course following a close runner-up finish in the 1 ¼-mile Grade 2 New York on June 8 at Belmont Park. In that race, her third since arriving at Brown’s barn in 2017, the 4-year-old Irish-bred filly by Myboycharlie was bumped at the start and navigated through rivals with a late run to finish a head behind stablemate Fourstar Crook. In her seasonal debut, Sistercharlie came back from a nearly nine-month layoff to post a gutsy, 2 ¼-length victory in the Grade 1 Jenny Wiley on April 14 at Keeneland.
“She was able to shorten up all the way to a mile and a sixteenth in the Jenny Wiley and ran quite well last time [in the New York],” said Brown, who previously won the Diana with Zagora (2011), Dacita (2016), and Lady Eli (2017). “She just didn’t get a good trip, got away from the gate slow and ran into a little traffic at the rear of the field. She got a very late start to her run and just missed. I think she ran a really good race. All three of her races have been outstanding for us. Hopefully, she can get away from the gate a little better this time and get some position. There appears to be a little more pace in this race.”
Hall of Famer John Velazquez, who has been aboard for all three of Sistercharlie’s North American starts, has the return call. Installed as the 9-5 morning-line favorite, the pair will break from the rail.
A Raving Beauty is undefeated in two starts in North America for owners Michael Dubb, Madaket Stables and Bethlehem Stables, capped by a three-quarter-length score last time out in the Grade 1 Just a Game on Belmont Stakes Day. Group 1-placed in Italy before moving to the U.S. for a 2018 campaign, the 5-year-old German-bred Mastercraftsman mare won her continental unveiling in impressive fashion, tracking the early place before kicking clear in the stretch to win the Grade 3 Beaugay by three lengths on May 12.
A Raving Beauty, 2-1 on the morning line, will be ridden by Irad Ortiz, Jr. from post 6.
“She’s a little keen [early] but very manageable,” Brown said “She should have a good early position in the race and Irad gets along with her really well. In both of her starts, despite the fact that she pulls a little, he’s gotten her to settle down early in her race and I think he’s gotten the best out of her. I don’t see the added distance [being] a problem.”
Rounding out the Brown triumvirate is e Five Racing’s New Money Honey, exiting a neck victory in an optional claiming race on June 21, her first start of the year. The Medaglia d’Oro filly won the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf in 2016 and returned as a sophomore to win the Grade 3 Wonder Again and Grade 1 Belmont Oaks in 2017.
“You’d think as an older horse, she’d get faster and she’s training like she will,” said Brown. “She had a top-notch year last year and maybe she had a few too many races at the end of last year and she just wasn’t herself. We gave her a nice break and she came back good in that allowance race. She’s training very well.”
New Money Honey, 8-1, will break from post 3 with Hall of Famer Javier Castellano aboard.
Among those looking to upset the Brown train are Patricia L. Moseley’s homebred Proctor’s Ledge, who swept last summer’s 3-year-old turf stakes for fillies with wins in the Grade 3 Lake George and the Grade 2 Lake Placid at Saratoga. She earned her first victory since the Lake Placid two starts back with a half-length win in the Grade 2 Distaff Turf Mile at Churchill Downs on Kentucky Derby Day. Last time out, the 4-year-old daughter of Ghostzapper finished second in the Just a Game, running in midpack early and dug in down the stretch to get within a length of A Raving Beauty.
“Obviously, it’s a Grade 1, so it’s going to be a tough spot, but she looks like she fits in there,” said trainer Brendan Walsh. “She’s been able to run with those fillies all year. We’re happy with her and she’s doing great, so we’re very confident she can run her best race and hopefully, it’ll be good enough and we’ll get some luck and be thereabouts.
“The last race, the one-turn mile at Belmont, was a fast time and that probably took her off her feet a little bit more than normal early, but she loved Saratoga last year and a mile and an eighth won’t be any problem at all,” he continued. “She’s very easy to do whatever with. She’s pretty automatic to ride, she can adjust in any scenario. She loved it up there last year and it worked out well for her. Hopefully, she’ll like it as much this year. She’s doing great and we couldn’t be happier with her.”
Proctor’s Ledge, 4-1, will have the services of Jose Ortiz from post 2.
Graham Motion trainee Ultra Brat will try to replicate her most recent effort, a 10 ¼-length win in the Grade 3 Gallorette on May 19 at Pimlico Race Course. Owned and bred by Alex G. Campbell, the 5-year-old Uncle Mo mare won the Grade 3 Marshua’s River in her season opener and finished third in the Grade 3 Suwannee River in February before finishing a dull 10th in the Jenny Wiley.
“I’d like to think I’ve given her plenty of time since that race because it was a big effort and I wanted to give her enough time to get over it,” said Motion. “She’s done really well and I think she deserves another shot at a Grade 1. In the race at Keeneland, I didn’t think she had the best trip, to be honest. She was very wide and things just didn’t work out very well. I think when she did kind of make a move, she was very wide and lost all chance.
“I think if she can run to the form of her best races, she can certainly be competitive and get a piece of it,” he added. “She really hasn’t done much wrong at all. I think she’s better this year, and with that in mind, I think she deserves a shot in a race like this. I wasn’t planning originally to run her this weekend, but I felt like she was doing really well and it’s a good opportunity to take a shot in a Grade 1 with her on what should be a really nice turf course.”
At 8-1, Ultra Brat will be ridden by Joel Rosario from post 5.
Rounding out the field for the Diana are Hawksmoor, fifth in the Grade 1 Gamely on May 26 at Santa Anita Park, and War Canoe, a recent half-length winner of an optional claimer on June 29.
One race earlier, Starlight Racing’s Tremont runner-up Sombeyay leads a field of eight in the six-furlong Sanford. Trained by Todd Pletcher, the juvenile Into Mischief colt broke his maiden at first asking, drawing off by 6 ¼ lengths on April 27 at Gulfstream Park, before stepping up to stakes company.
In the Tremont, Sombeyay stumbled at the start but recovered well enough to finish three-quarters of a length behind Our Braintrust on June 8 at Belmont.
Castellano will ride Sombeyay, favored at 2-1, from the rail.
Also in the Sanford are fellow Pletcher trainee Lexitonian; speedy maiden winner Strike Silver for trainer Mark Casse; $400,000 2-year-old in training purchase Bano Solo; maiden winner Whiskey Echo, adding Lasix for the first time; Chase Greatness; and Knicks Go. Dream Maker will scratch from the Sanford and will be pointed to the Grade 2, $200,000 Saratoga Special presented by Coors Light on April 12, said Casse.
Cover Photo: Chad Brown; Anne M Eberhardt Photo