Saratoga Race Course Notes: Hofburg out of G1 Travers after spiking a fever
NYRA RELEASE —-
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Hofburg, winner of the Curlin on July 27, is out of Saturday’s Grade 1, $1.25 million Travers after spiking a fever, Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott said Sunday morning at Saratoga Race Course.
Hofburg, owned by Juddmonte Farms, appeared to be rounding into top form following a third-place finish in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes and a convincing five-length win in the Curlin at Saratoga in his last start.
“Hofburg will not run in the Travers,” a disappointed Mott said. “He’s been off the training list the last two days and we’re not going to force ourselves into the Travers.”
A chestnut son of Tapit, Hofburg has a record of 2-1-1 in six starts and earnings of $432,950.
The field for the Travers on Saturday remains large, with as many as 12 starters, including Grade 1 Haskell Invitational winner Good Magic and the filly Wonder Gadot.
• ‘Nothing fancy’: Catholic Boy stretches his legs in G1 Travers breeze
• Belmont runner-up Gronkowski ‘stronger and fitter’ heading into Travers
• G1 Personal Ensign contender Elate tops talented workers for Mott barn
• Eskimo Kisses in perfect bliss following G1 Alabama victory
• Bravazo, Lukas’ 20th Travers starter, turns in bullet five-furlong move
• Romans: King Zachary belongs in ‘eclectic’ Travers field
• Travers filly Wonder Gadot gets morning off, returns to track Monday
• Asmussen duo Tenfold, Meistermind put in final workouts for Travers
• G1 Forego-bound C Z Rocket sets sights on ‘class test’
With four graded stakes wins on his resume and more than $1 million in his bankroll, Robert LaPenta’s Catholic Boy is shaping up as one of the more intriguing contenders in what looks to be a wide-open Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers on Saturday at Saratoga Race Course.
The son of More Than Ready turned in his final move on Sunday morning after the renovation break on the main track for the 1 ¼-mile race at the Spa, cruising a half-mile in 49.44 seconds, with NYRA clockers catching the gallop-out in 1:02 3/5 under Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano.
“I liked the way he worked today,” said Castellano, who holds the record for most Travers wins by a jockey with five, including Bernardini (2006), Afleet Alex (2010), Stay Thirsty (2011), V. E. Day (2014), and Keen Ice (2015). “He’s happy. It was just a maintenance work. We’re not looking for a fancy work. Our target is next week. Two weeks before we had a real solid work. Today we were looking for something just to stretch him out before the race.”
Catholic Boy had three previous works over the main track, breezing a half-mile on July 29 in :48.68, five furlongs in a bullet :59.66 on August 6, and a half in :48.59 on August 13.
“We were doing it more for us than him,” said trainer Jonathan Thomas. “I asked Javier to let him gallop out a little piece, and he jumped right onto the bridle and showed he was there for him, and then he slowed him down a little to show he was there. It wasn’t exciting, but we weren’t looking for exciting.”
Catholic Boy, who won the Grade 1 Belmont Derby, the Grade 3 Pennine Ridge and the Grade 3 With Anticipation on the turf, has made three starts on dirt, winning the Grade 3 Remsen as a 2-year-old and finishing second in the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis at Tampa Bay Downs and fourth in the Grade 1 Florida Derby.
“Initially we ran him on the turf because it was the only opportunity to run him around two turns,” said Thomas. “After the Breeders’ Cup [fourth in the Juvenile Turf], there was nothing of note left on the turf. We thought it was a great time to try the dirt and he handled it great in the Remsen. Things didn’t work out in the Sam Davis and he [bled] in the Florida Derby, so you have to draw a line through that.”
This will be the first Travers starter for Thomas, 38, who was an assistant to Todd Pletcher before going out on his own.
“We bought this horse as a yearling, broke him, so he’s got a special place on our team,” he said. “He’s a 3-year-old, but we have people who’ve literally been around him for 2 ½ years. Win, lose, or draw, we’ve very proud of him and what he means to us.”
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Belmont runner-up Gronkowski ‘stronger and fitter’ heading into Travers
Phoenix Thoroughbred’s Gronkowski put in his final breeze before the Grade 1 Travers, officially working five furlongs in 1:00.02 in company with Instilled Regard on Sunday morning on Saratoga Race Course’s main track.
The work was the fifth at the Spa since Gronkowski made his North American debut, running second to Triple Crown-winning Justify in the Belmont Stakes on June 9.
Gronkowski worked inside of Instilled Regard, finishing a half-length in front of his stablemate. NYRA clockers caught the duo going the last four furlongs in 47 3/5 seconds.
“He breezed super,” Brown said from his barn. “The horse has gotten stronger and fitter. He couldn’t be coming into the race any better.”
Named for the New England Patriots All-Pro tight end Rob Gronkowski, the equine Gronkowski made his first six career starts in Great Britain, notching four consecutive wins – all at a mile – before being shipped to New York to run in the “Test of the Champion,” where he rallied from last of 10 to finish 1 ¾ lengths behind Justify in the 1 ½-mile Belmont.
“I think it did him a lot of good, the time to recover from that has [helped] as well,” Brown said. “The horse is fresh. He’s a lot sharper than he was then. Hopefully, that will give him a little better position leaving the gate.”
Brown’s other expected entrant in the Travers, Good Magic, put in his final work before the Mid-Summer Derby on Friday when he went five furlongs in 1:00.44 on the main track. The Curlin colt is coming off a win in the Grade 1 Haskell Invitational on July 29 at Monmouth Park that marked his first start since a fourth-place effort in the Preakness on May 19 at Pimlico.
The 2017 champion juvenile male is 3-3-1 in eight starts, including a second-place finish to Justify in the Kentucky Derby on May 5. He is owned by e Five Racing Thoroughbreds and Stonestreet Stables.
“He came out of the work really well,” Brown said.
Brown said Engage continues to ready for the Grade 1, $500,000 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial presented by Runhappy on Travers Day. The 3-year-old Into Mischief colt has never finished worse than second in seven career starts, posting wins in the 2017 Grade 3 Futurity and the Gold Fever on May 13 at Belmont.
Engage is coming off back-to-back runner-up efforts in the Grade 2 Woody Stephens on Belmont Stakes Day and the Grade 3 Amsterdam on July 28 at the Spa. He breezed Friday on Saratoga’s main track, going four furlongs in 48.02 seconds.
“He had a nice work, I was real happy with the way he’s coming in,” Brown said. “It’s a tough race, it’s coming up pretty tough, but he’s doing well.”
Rushing Fall came out of her 2 ¾-length win in Saturday’s Grade 2 Lake Placid in good order, Brown said.
Sitting just off pacesetter Go Noni Go, Rushing Fall took command out of the final turn and was geared down by Javier Castellano to give Brown his first career Lake Placid victory.
After notching her fourth graded stakes win in six starts overall, adding to the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf and the Grade 2 Appalachian, Brown said Rushing Fall could target the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup in October at Keeneland.
“She came out of it real well, I’ll probably just train her up to the Queen Elizabeth,” Brown said.
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G1 Personal Ensign contender Elate tops talented workers for Mott barn
On a day Bill Mott announced that Curlin winner Hofburg won’t run in the Travers, the Hall of Fame trainer watched Elate put in her final workout before Saturday’s Grade 1, $700,000 Personal Ensign at Saratoga.
Elate covered four furlongs in 49.60 seconds over the Oklahoma training track on a cool, sunny Sunday morning.
“She just needed a little blowout, and that’s what we got,” said Mott. “I think 49 for her over this track and a nice five-eighths gallop-out in 1:02 is enough to maintain fitness and keep her sharp enough for the race. And it’s not too fast, because you don’t want to leave their race out there in the morning.”
Elate, coming into the Personal Ensign off an impressive win in the Grade 2 Delaware Handicap after an eight-month break, will be taking on Grade 1 Ogden Phipps winner Abel Tasman. The Bob Baffert-trained filly worked five furlongs in 1:01 at Del Mar on Sunday morning.
Other Mott workers on Sunday included Grade 1 Sword Dancer hopeful Channel Maker (four furlongs, :48.97) and Mucho (four furlongs, :48.87), who is on schedule for the Grade 1 Hopeful on September 3.
“They both worked really well,” said Mott.
Hofburg, who won the Curlin in his last start, spiked a fever and was off the training list the last two days, leading Mott to make the decision not to run.
“We’re not going to force ourselves into the Travers,” he said.
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Eskimo Kisses in perfect bliss following G1 Alabama victory
Eskimo Kisses was one cool and relaxed racehorse Sunday morning, the day after earning her first graded stakes victory in the Grade 1, $600,000 Alabama with a thrilling last-to-first journey.
“She came back good with no problems,” said trainer Kenny McPeek. “She needed to run her ‘A’ game and she ran more than that. We were hoping for a fast pace and that they would kind of overlook us sitting back there. With her running style, it’s got to set up and you can’t make her do too much early or she won’t finish. I’m extremely proud of what she did.”
Eskimo Kisses, with Jose Ortiz following McPeek’s instructions perfectly, bided her time in last place, and took charge in the stretch for a 6 1/2-length win. Before the Alabama, the chestnut To Honor and Serve filly finished fourth in the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks on July 22 in her first start since she was fourth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks on May 4.
“The Coaching Club Oaks was more of a fitness race for us,” said McPeek. “She needed to put some weight on her after the Kentucky Oaks. She had been running hard and traveling so I sent her over to my farm and we gave her some rest in the backyard of my farm for four to six weeks. She put on some weight and she came back great.”
McPeek is looking at the Grade 1 Spinster on October 7 at Keeneland for Eskimo Kisses’ next start. The Grade 1 Cotillion on September 22 at Parx Racing also is a possibility, he said.
“Anytime you can check a prestigious race like this off the list, it’s a good deal,” said McPeek of the Alabama. “I’m really proud of her and how she got it done. We’ll most likely target the Spinster. The Cotillion might be a little short for her, but we’ll let her tell us the best spot.”
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Bravazo, Lukas’ 20th Travers starter, turns in bullet five-furlong move
Calumet Farm’s Bravazo turned in his final breeze before Saturday’s Grade 1 Travers early Sunday morning for Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas.
Taking to the Oklahoma training track just before 6 a.m., the 3-year-old Awesome Again colt worked five furlongs in 1:00.11 in tandem with 3-year-old maiden Royal Edition to his inside. The pair covered three furlongs in 35 2/5 seconds before Bravazo drew ahead at the finish.
“It went real good,” said Lukas. “We wanted him to go right at a minute, and that’s what we got, so that’s probably all we need. He did it easy, like they all say. He’s doing well, eating well, getting in the tub, I’m looking forward to it. I’m anxious to run him.”
The Oklahoma training track serves as a great place to train horses, according to the 82-year-old conditioner, who has maintained his barn a short distance from the historic track for roughly 20 years.
“None of my horses that run here ever go over there [to the main track]; it’s inconvenient,” he said. “I never do that. I never take them over there to work them or anything. First time they’ll see the paddock is the first time they’ll see the track. I think you have to school if you need it. I don’t think you should create a situation to make a horse train. If they’re doing well in the paddock stay away from it. That’s my theory. I’ve schooled horses, but not very many.”
Lukas will saddle his 20th starter in the 149th Travers, and is in search of winning his fourth Mid-Summer Derby after bringing Corporate Report (1991), Thunder Gulch (1995) and Will Take Charge (2013) to the winner’s circle. As the race gets closer, and the banter rises, Lukas keeps his eye on his colt, and nothing else.
“I don’t pay attention to how the races are coming together or anything,” he said. “I just train forwardly, and if I get comfortable with my horse, I feel like we got a chance, I go over there. I feel like we got a good chance.”
Jockey Luis Saez, who teamed with Lukas to win the Travers with Will Take Charge five years ago, has the call aboard Bravazo for the fourth straight race.
“I think Luis has now gotten to know him better,” said Lukas. “The horse is definitely better, and depending on how the race unfolds, we’ll keep them all honest. One good thing about him [Bravazo] is that he’s got enough tactical speed to be in the race. He doesn’t need a lot of help. He’s going to run a good one, he really is.”
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Romans: King Zachary belongs in ‘eclectic’ Travers field
King Zachary, fourth as the favorite in the Grade 3 Indiana Derby on July 14, tuned up for his upcoming engagement in the Grade 1 Travers Sunday morning over the main track at Saratoga, breezing five furlongs in a bullet 59.66 seconds under exercise rider Tammy Fox.
NYRA clockers caught the Curlin colt going the first three-eighths in :35 3/5 and galloping out six furlongs in 1:12 3/5.
“He worked great,” said Dale Romans, who trains the chestnut colt for Thomas Conway. “I wasn’t looking for much; just that he is happy and consistent, safe and sound. He did it all perfectly.”
With a victory in the Grade 3 Matt Winn at Churchill Downs as his lone graded stakes score, King Zachary is expected to be one of the longer shots in the field. As many as 12 may enter, among them likely favorite Good Magic, winner of the Grade 1 Haskell; Gronkowski, second to Triple Crown winner Justify in the Grade 1 Belmont; Grade 2 Jim Dandy winner Tenfold; Europeans Mendelssohn and Seahenge from Aidan O’Brien, and the Canadian filly Wonder Gadot, who beat males in the Prince of Wales and Queens Plate in her two most recent starts.
“It’s a very eclectic group of horses, which makes it an interesting race,” said Romans. “If the filly wins, it’ll expose the whole bunch. And you can never count Wayne Lukas [trainer of Bravazo] out.
“I think we have a good chance,” he added. “He’s an up-and-coming horse, and we’re looking for him to blossom the second half the year and into his four-year-old campaign.”
Romans also sent out Amsterdam winner Promises Fulfilled, with the 3-year-old covering a half-mile in 47.66 seconds.
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Travers filly Wonder Gadot gets morning off, returns to track Monday
Gary Barber’s Wonder Gadot exited her final breeze for Saturday’s Grade 1 Travers in good order and will return to the track in the first set Monday morning, said trainer Mark Casse.
The 3-year-old filly by Medaglia d’Oro enjoyed an easy Sunday morning, her second walk day since breezing a four-furlong bullet in 47.60 seconds on Friday.
“She’s been very good. All is well,” said Casse. “We gave her today off – she just went around the shedrow – and she’ll go back tomorrow.”
Bred in Ontario, Wonder Gadot won the first two legs of Canada’s Triple Crown in dominating fashion over males this summer, but her connections opted to skip the third leg and target the Travers instead, where she will be the first filly since Davona Dale in 1979 to contest the Mid-Summer Derby. Davona Dale, named champion 3-year-old filly and later inducted in the Hall of Fame, finished fourth as the favorite that year.
Seven fillies have won the Travers in its 148-year history with the last being Lady Rotha, who was elevated to victory via disqualification in 1915.
A decision by Barber regarding the riding assignment for Wonder Gadot in the Travers is expected Monday. Casse mentioned Hall of Famer Mike Smith, Florent Geroux, and Tyler Gaffalione as possibilities for the call.
“She’s a sweetie about everything, but she does have a lot of energy,” Casse said of her racing style. “You kind of always have to slow her down.”
Also, despite Wonder Gadot’s redirection to the Travers, Casse still won his own Triple Crown on Saturday, with Chiefswood Stable’s Neepawa pulling away to a 3 ½-length victory in the in the Breeders’ Stakes over the turf at Woodbine.
“That was really nice, because I felt some mixed emotions [about sending Wonder Gadot to the Travers],” said Casse. “I felt a little bad that I could be letting Woodbine down and letting Canada down, so it was nice to win with that colt. Plus, the owners, Cheifswood, are just a super operation. So now, I’m happy that we’re here and we’re able to represent Woodbine with Wonder Gadot.”
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Asmussen duo Tenfold, Meistermind put in final workouts for Travers
Tenfold and Meistermind put in their final workouts on Sunday morning ahead of the Travers, with each of Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen’s colts posting leisurely times over the Oklahoma training track at Saratoga.
Winchell Thoroughbred’s Tenfold, who won the Grade 2 Jim Dandy on July 28, covered four furlongs in 50.09 seconds, 49th of 66 workers at the same distance. WinStar Farms, China Horse Club International and SF Racing’s Meistermind, who ran fifth in a Saratoga allowance race on Aug. 3 after a maiden win at Churchill Downs on June 30, clocked :50.19, 54th of 66 workers.
“Good. Looked good,” Asmussen said of Tenfold, bidding to become the 11th horse to pull off the Jim Dandy-Travers double.
Meistermind “worked really well here,” he said of the bay colt by Bodemeister, adding his workers “looked a little tired this morning, but they should be.”
Asmussen is seeking his first Travers win with his fifth and sixth starters. In 2016, Gun Runner ran third and Belmont Stakes winner Creator ran seventh.
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G1 Forego-bound C Z Rocket sets sights on ‘class test’
Frank Fletcher Racing’s C Z Rocket turned in his final breeze ahead of Saturday’s Grade 1, $600,000 Forego for older sprinters on the Travers undercard. Trained by Al Stall, Jr., the 4-year-old City Zip colt worked four furlongs in 49.14 seconds over Saratoga’s Oklahoma training track.
“We wanted to give him a final blowout before the race,” said Stall. “We are going to focus on him this week going into the Forego. This is going to be a class test for him.”
For the Forego, C Z Rocket is expected to compete against two-time Grade 1 winner City of Light, multiple graded stakes winning sprinter American Anthem, who finished third in last year’s Grade 1 H Allen Jerkens Memorial, recent Grade 2 Belmont Sprint Championship winner Limousine Liberal, Whitmore, Awesome Slew, Heartwood, No Dozing and Warrior’s Club.
C Z Rocket returns to Saratoga where he won his debut with a last-to-first move by two lengths, then followed that with a pair of allowance wins by again coming off the pace and being closer to the pace. He ended his 3-year-old season with a sixth-place finish in the Grade 1 Malibu at Santa Anita.
“After the Malibu, we thought it was time to regroup,” Stall said. “He has developed nicely and has proven to be versatile with his running style.”
In two starts this year at Churchill Downs, C Z Rocket was third to American Anthem in an allowance race and won the Kelly’s Landing Stakes by four lengths.