Saratoga Race Course Notes 8/23
NYRA RELEASE —-
Saratoga Race Course Notes
O’Brien trainees Mendelssohn, Seahenge gallop over Saratoga main track for first time since arriving from Ireland
Jim Dandy winner Tenfold takes ‘home track advantage’ into G1 Travers
Catholic Boy looks to make history in Travers from Post 11
Catalano looking for big effort from Farrell in G1 Personal Ensign
Pletcher hoping for ‘better tactical position’ for Vino Rosso in Travers; Frankel colt Gidu switches to main track for G1 Allen Jerkens
Lukas: Triple Crown-tested Bravazo at his best for Travers
Limousine Liberal looks to punch Breeders’ Cup ticket in G1 Forego
G1 Ballerina entrant Highway Star ‘doing fine’ after pulling shoe in breeze
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Trainer Aidan O’Brien’s European contenders Mendelssohn and Seahenge on Thursday made their first venture to the Saratoga Race Course main track, galloping under their respective exercise riders, Alan Crowe and Craig Bryson. The tandem arrived in Saratoga on Tuesday after making the approximately 12 ½-hour trip from Ireland.
On Saturday in the Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers, Mendelssohn will attempt to regain the brilliance he displayed when he won the Group 2 UAE Derby by 18 ½ lengths in March. The Travers, carded as the 11th race with a post time of 5:44 p.m., is a 1 ¼-mile event for 3-year-olds and will be broadcast live on NBC.
“They just did a gentle canter around from the seven, seven and a half [pole],” said T.J. Comerford, assistant to O’Brien. “They trotted the opposite way, and we brought them back and just washed them. Tomorrow, they’ll pretty much do the same; a little bit quicker from the same [starting point] again.”
In his two previous trips to the United States, Mendelssohn was last of 20 in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby in May at Churchill Downs and third, beaten 9 ½ lengths, as the 3-2 favorite in the Grade 3 Dwyer on July 7 at Belmont Park.
“I think after his bad run in the Kentucky Derby, I suppose he has to build on it,” said Comerford. “I think the last day at Belmont he did build on it. He had to get a little bit of confidence from somewhere to come back and run like he did. I know they made him favored and I suppose a lot of people expected him to win, but it was a steppingstone for the days ahead more than anything. I think running positive on the dirt was a big thing for him. He did that at Belmont, and if he can run a good race [in the Travers] that’s all we’ll be asking for.”
Both colts are owned by Michael B. Tabor, Mrs. John Magnier, and Derrick Smith. Comerford admitted that it’s difficult for O’Brien’s Ballydoyle training operation, which is based in County Tipperary, Ireland, to get a horse fully prepared for the frenetic style of American dirt racing.
“We just train on our own premises at home, pretty much the same as we always do, so we can’t really prepare much for [American dirt races],” said Comerford. “For the Kentucky Derby we went to Dundalk, and that was on the synthetic surface. That’s as close as we can get. We have the American styles and we can jump them from the gate. We can do all of that, but in regards to running them on the dirt, we have to come here. So, really, our only preparation is to run in these races. The closest we can get to it is our all-weather tracks.”
O’Brien has selected the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Classic in November at Churchill Downs as his long-term objective for Mendelssohn, who, like Triple Crown winner Justify, is a son of Scat Daddy.
“We have to try to get back to that form [Mendelssohn showed in the UAE Derby],” said Comerford. “That’s why we’re coming here. We’re trying to persist with what the plan was originally, and that is to get him to the Breeders’ Cup. We’re just hoping to see that spark again because that was a good day and that was a really good performance. It’s hard to imagine, ‘Was that it?’ I’m sure he can come back to that again. We just have to try.”
Seahenge has accompanied Mendelssohn on his two previous trips to the United States, finishing seventh in the Grade 3 Pat Day Mile in May at Churchill and seventh in the Dwyer. Winner of the Group 2 Champagne in England as a 2-year-old, Seahenge will be switching back to grass and facing older horses for the first time Saturday in the Grade 1, $1 million Sword Dancer at 1 ½ miles on the inner turf course.
“I actually thought he came home well and finished well [in the Pat Day],” said Comerford. “I thought it was a positive run from him, if you could build on that. When he ran at Belmont he didn’t run to that grade again. We’re coming here to trying to win a turf race as well. The turf is not a problem for us. That’s what we really dabble in.”
Although the Sword Dancer looks like a tough assignment for Seahenge, who was tabbed at 30-1 on the morning line, Comerford said there were several reasons why the race was a logical selection.
“We have plenty of horses for turf races at home,” said Comerford. “We have good horses for all of the international races, and he’s a good companion for Mendelssohn as well. And there’s good prize money, and why not have a go? We had a go with Idaho [who finished sixth as the favorite in the Sword Dancer] last year. I thought he would win. It really didn’t work out, but it’s just one of those days. You just try to win what races you can on the way.”
* * *
Jim Dandy winner Tenfold takes ‘home track advantage’ into G1 Travers
In a race as competitive as this year’s Grade 1 Travers, even the slightest edge can make a difference. Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen believes he has one with Winchell Thoroughbreds’ homebred Tenfold.
Of the 11 3-year-olds set to line up in Saturday’s Mid-Summer Derby, Tenfold is the only one with a win over Saratoga’s main track, having taken the traditional local Travers prep, the Grade 2 Jim Dandy, on July 28.
A win in the Travers would make Tenfold the 11th horse to complete the Jim Dandy-Travers double. The last was Alpha, who dead-heated for first with Golden Ticket in 2012.
“He’s got a win over the racetrack and he’s done really well since,” Asmussen said. “Having a win in the prep is a positive. I thought the draw was good for him, and I expect a huge race from him on Saturday.”
Tenfold and regular rider Ricardo Santana, Jr. will break from post 10 in the 1 ¼-mile Travers, with only Grade 1 winner Catholic Boy to his outside. It will be the second start for the son of two-time Horse of the Year and 2014 Hall of Fame inductee Curlin – also trained by Asmussen – since a Triple Crown campaign that saw him run third in the Grade 1 Preakness, beaten less than a length and a neck away from second, and fifth in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes.
Among the horses he beat in the Preakness was Travers program favorite Good Magic, a neck behind in fourth, while he also finished ahead of Travers contender and Preakness runner-up Bravazo in the Belmont.
“I think the Preakness showed that he’s not that far off of the level we want to be at,” Asmussen said. “He was the longest shot on the board in the Preakness [at 26-1] and I was surprised by that. He was beaten three-quarters [of a length]. He’s a lightly raced horse and if he gets beat, everybody will tell you they knew it and if he wins, everybody will tell you they knew it.”
Tenfold sat just off the pace in the 1 1/8-mile Jim Dandy, took a short lead into the stretch and was in command through the lane despite drifting and bearing out in the final eighth of a mile to win by three-quarters of a length over Flameaway. Travers contender Vino Rosso was another head back in third.
“It was extremely concerning with whatever he looked at. We’ve had him over there several mornings since and he hasn’t seen anything,” Asmussen said. “Through discussions with Ricardo we thought he picked up the photographers in the infield. That’s not something we can recreate and that’s not something that will be there in the morning for him. Hopefully that has nothing to do with the outcome on Saturday.
“If anything, he laid in a little bit in the Preakness. I thought he was a little tired late and laid in, but he’s never done anything like that any other time,” he added. “I’m pretty sure the company will keep him busy in the Travers.”
A career winner of more than 8,100 races including two in the Triple Crown and six in the Breeders’ Cup, Asmussen is searching for his first Travers victory. He was third with Pyro in 2008, sixth with Kensei in 2009, and third and seventh with Gun Runner and Belmont Stakes winner Creator, respectively, in 2016.
Asmussen has a second Travers starter in WinStar Farm, China Horse Club and SF Racing’s Meistermind, a maiden winner over older horses going 1 ¼ miles June 30 at Churchill Downs. A half-brother to Mine That Bird, 50-1 winner of the 2009 Kentucky Derby, Meistermind will be ridden by Manny Franco from post 6.
Meistermind made his Saratoga debut August 3, finishing fifth in an open 1 1/8-mile allowance, also against his elders, on a muddy, sealed main track. He has had a pair of works over the Oklahoma training track since, most recently going an easy half-mile in 50.19 seconds August 19.
“I think there will be a solid pace in the Travers, especially for a mile and a quarter run, and he gets the distance. We’ll try to recreate a little sibling magic,” Asmussen said. “We all were there and … we watched it. You can see a scenario where there’s a lot of pace, a lot of horses are going to try to keep their face clean in this race and I think the draw really leads to a solid pace with who’s where, and he’ll benefit from it. I do believe there’s a bunch of those horses that can beat him at a mile and an eighth, but cannot beat him at a mile and a quarter – and this race is a mile and a quarter.”
In addition to his Travers duo, Asmussen also will be saddling Grade 1 winner Union Strike for the first time as she faces eight others in the Grade 1, $500,000 Ketel One Ballerina.
“She’s special; she’s aware of who she is,” said Asmussen of the Union Rags filly, who won the 2016 Del Mar Debutante and is in search of her first victory this year.
In her most recent outing, Union Strike broke dead last in a field of 13 for the Grade 3 Chicago Handicap on June 23 at Arlington Park and closed to finish third.
Previously trained by owner Mick Ruis, Union Strike has been based at the Spa since late July, most recently covering a half-mile in 50.21 seconds on August 20, a week after breezing five furlongs in 1:00.44.
“I expect a touch more gate speed than last time,” said Asmussen. “Her post [No. 8] helps her, coming out of the chute. I expect a huge performance from her.”
* * *
Catholic Boy looks to make history in Travers from Post 11
Co-fourth choice in the Travers at 8-1 with Tenfold, Robert V. LaPenta’s Catholic Boy is looking to become the first horse since 1901 to finish first in the Travers leaving from Post 11.
In 1977, Jatski left from Post 11 in a 14-horse field and finished a nose behind Run Dusty Run but was promoted to first via disqualification. Interestingly, three days earlier, a chestnut colt named Affirmed won the Sanford at the Spa. A year later the Triple Crown winner finished first in the Mid-Summer Derby but was disqualified in favor of his rival Alydar, marking the last time a horse was disqualified in the race.
Trainer Jonathan Thomas, who got his wish when he asked to draw outside of Good Magic (No. 9), said he’d be happy if the Grade 1 Belmont Derby winner found himself forwardly placed behind comfortable fractions in the 1 ¼-mile race.
“He’s been putting himself into races more naturally,” said Thomas. “He’s breaking a little sharper, being a little more aggressive early on in his races, in a good way, so I’m not going to rob him of that. Now, if it turns into the Alabama, where they went 22 and change and 46, I don’t want to be anywhere close to that sort of pace scenario. I think his most effective weapon is his big action. If we can get him into a big kind of rhythm and close to the pace where he doesn’t have to work to close, that’s where I’d like to have him.”
Thomas, a former assistant to Todd Pletcher, vividly remembers his first Travers, as do many who witnessed Birdstone’s victory under a foreboding sky in 2004.
“I had come up here to try and make it in the north,” he recalled. “I was living on the backside and out of my truck. There must have been three of us watching from the backside; there was literally no one else out there. I remember the heavens coming down, and the lightning – I thought it was one of the coolest things ever. I didn’t even know Birdstone had won until they galloped out past us. It was like a snapshot I’ll always remember.”
* * *
Catalano looking for big effort from Farrell in G1 Personal Ensign
Wayne Catalano has been around horses nearly his entire life. An exercise rider for Hall of Famer Jack Van Berg as a teenager, he became a jockey, won his first race in 1974, and totaled nearly 1,800 winners over a nine-year career.
Based in Chicago, he turned to training in 1983, had a taste of Kentucky Derby fever with Louisiana Derby and Arkansas Derby winner Crypto Star, won Breeders’ Cup races with Dreaming of Anna, She Be Wild and Stephanie’s Kitten, and has saddled nearly 2,800 winners.
On Saturday, he will send out Farrell, his talented 4-year-old filly, in the “Win and You’re In” Breeders’ Cup Distaff qualifier Grade 1, $700,000 Personal Ensign, the seventh race (post time 2:59 p.m.) on a stellar Travers Day card featuring seven graded stakes worth $4.95 million and highlighted by the Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers.
“She’s training great, we love the way she’s coming into the race,” the 62-year-old conditioner said Thursday. “She galloped like a monster this morning. It’s a very tough race, but the filly’s doing great and that’s all you can ask for.”
The field of six fillies and mares going 1 1/8 miles is led by 6-5 morning-line favorite Abel Tasman and 7-5 second choice Elate, with Wow Cat third choice at 4-1, Farrell 6-1, Fuhriously Kissed 20-1 and She Takes Heart 50-1.
While trainer Bob Baffert’s Abel Tasman is the top choice off her dominating win in the Grade 1 Ogden Phipps on June 9 at Saratoga and Elate was an easy winner in the Grade 2 Delaware Handicap in her first race of 2018, Farrell should not be overlooked, says Catalano.
The Malibu Moon filly owned by Coffeepot Stables held on to beat Wow Cat by a neck in the 1 1 /8-mile, Grade 3 Shuvee on July 29 at Saratoga, following runner-up finishes in the Grade 1 La Troienne and the Grade 2 Fleur de Lis, both at Churchill Downs. In the La Troienne, Farrell finished second and Abel Tasman was fourth.
“She’s gotten bigger and stronger and [is] carrying herself further,” said Catalano, who also won the 2012 Grade 2 Lake Placid at Saratoga with Stephanie’s Kitten. “I’ve been very fortunate to have a few good ones, but Farrell is right up with those others. She’s earned over a million dollars and has won some big races.”
The resume is strong. She broke her maiden in her second start, then went on a four-race winning streak to close out her 2-year-old campaign and open her 3-year-old season – taking the Grade 2 Golden Rod in November at Churchill Downs, and the Silverbulletday, the Grade 2 Rachel Alexandra and the Grade 2 Fair Grounds Oaks, all at Fair Grounds, to start 2017 off. Farrell was 14th in the slop in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks won by Abel Tasman, and closed out her 3-year-old campaign with a win in the Grade 2 Chilukki at Churchill Downs.
Farrell, who will be ridden by regular jockey Channing Hill, has a 2-2-1 record in seven starts this year, and a career record of 8-2-2 from 17 starts for earnings of $1,064,777.
“The past is the past,” said Catalano. “Right now is what we need to be concerned with.”
A good showing in the Personal Ensign could lead to a next start in the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Distaff at Churchill Downs.
“That would be ideal,” said Catalano.
* * *
Pletcher hoping for ‘better tactical position’ for Vino Rosso in Travers; Frankel colt Gidu switches to main track for G1 Allen Jerkens
Trainer Todd Pletcher said he’s hoping for a little more focus out of Travers contender Vino Rosso when the gates spring in Saturday’s Mid-Summer Derby.
Owned by Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable, the chestnut colt by Curlin comes into the 1 ¼-mile Travers off a third-place finish in the 1 1/8-mile Grade 2 Jim Dandy at the Spa on July 28. In that race, Vino Rosso got off to a slow start but closed strongly to finish three-quarters of a length behind fellow Travers contender Tenfold.
Vino Rosso won the Grade 2 Wood Memorial by three lengths in April, his second start with blinkers, and went on to finish a late-closing ninth in the Kentucky Derby and fourth in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes.
“He had a good gallop this morning. He’ll have one more and that’s all we can do,” said Pletcher on Thursday. “We have an idea of what we’d like to do [in the Travers], we just hope that Vino Rosso cooperates, has his mind on business, and puts himself in a little better tactical position than he did in the Jim Dandy.
“We’ve changed a few things in his training that are hopefully productive,” he added. “Hopefully, the weather stays good and he gets a nice, dry track, which I think he appreciates. I think those things will help.”
On the Travers undercard, Zayat Stable’s Gidu will make his first start over the main track for the Pletcher barn in the Grade 1, $500,000 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial presented by Runhappy.
By Frankel, the gray Irish-bred colt tried two turns on the grass in the Grade 2 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame last time out, running off to an early lead before fading in the stretch to finish fourth. That was his first start since shipping to Royal Ascot in June, where he finished sixth in the six-furlong Group 1 Commonwealth, beaten 2 ½ lengths in a field of 22.
The Ascot trip followed game victories this spring in the Paradise Creek, by a neck at seven furlongs on May 26, and the one-mile Columbia, by 1 ¾ lengths in March.
“We’ve been considering trying him on the dirt for a while now,” said Pletcher. “He’s kind of a free-running horse and he was a little bit keen in the Hall of Fame. I think he was a little too headstrong early on. I think if he relaxed, he would’ve been more effective at a mile and a sixteenth, but seven furlongs seems like an optimal distance for him and the timing is right.
“The question, obviously, is how well he’ll transition to the dirt, but he’s always trained well on it. He is out of an Unbridled’s Song mare, so his isn’t a complete turf pedigree,” he added. “We just felt like if we’re going to give it a try, we might as well do it in a meaningful race. The thing about running on the dirt is that you don’t have to hold them up quite as much and you can kind of let him do his thing.”
* * *
Lukas: Triple Crown-tested Bravazo at his best for Travers
Calumet Farm’s Grade 1 Travers starter Bravazo is the lone active 3-year-old who can claim a start in all three Triple Crown races this year. Sixth in the Kentucky Derby and second in the Preakness, Bravazo’s gutsy finish outside Tenfold in the foggy, sloppy stretch in the Preakness came within a half-length of ending Justify’s bid to become the 13th Triple Crown winner in history.
Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, who will saddle his 20th Travers starter on Saturday, and hopes to add his fourth Mid-Summer Derby victory, after guiding Corporate Report (1991), Thunder Gulch (1995) and Will Take Charge (2013) to the winner’s circle, thinks his colt is better now than in any of his 12 previous starts.
“He’s getting better,” said Lukas. “He’s following the same pattern as Will Take Charge. He looks better and stronger right now than anytime this summer. Now that might not be good enough, [he] still might be a second or third or fourth, who knows, but you’d have to, from where I’m sitting, say to yourself ‘this is the best we’d ever led him over there.’
“Now when you get down just beyond a Triple Crown horse, you get 11 horses that are very, very competitive, and you’re getting a situation where even the expert handicapper has got to look at it seriously and say well maybe I’ll play these, or maybe I’ll play this one,” he added. “That’s the kind of deal you have here. You can make a case about any of them, but about two, and I wouldn’t mention those. I’m not a good handicapper.”
Based at Saratoga after his Triple Crown campaign, Bravazo made his next start in the Grade 1 Haskell at Monmouth Park, where he finished second to Good Magic in a performance that may have been somewhat compromised, according to Lukas.
“He ran on three shoes in the Haskell,” he said. “He lost a shoe right out of the gate. He broke and left that shoe, right front. I didn’t make a big deal, we got beat, what the hell.”
The soon to be 83-year-old horseman has a great amount of respect for the Chad Brown-trained Good Magic, the 2-1 morning line favorite in the Travers.
“You know, I keep looking for him to bounce, and yet he keeps showing up,” said Lukas. “He’s a good little horse. I think that Chad’s done a good job with him. He’s managed him well, he skips a couple to make sure that he’s right. This might be the closest he’s ever crowded him though so maybe we’ll see, and this might be the most competitive [race] since the Derby field.”
* * *
Limousine Liberal looks to punch Breeders’ Cup ticket in G1 Forego
The last time Katherine Ball’s Limousine Liberal trained at Keeneland and shipped to New York, he won a seven-furlong graded stakes in capturing the Grade 2 Belmont Sprint Championship by a neck on July 7. Trainer Ben Colebrook said he’s hoping the 6-year-old gelding follows suit in Saturday’s Grade 1, $600,000 Forego, one of six Grade 1 races on a stacked Travers Day card.
The ultra-consistent Limousine Liberal has finished on the board in his last 11 starts dating to 2016 and has won six of his last 10 starts overall, including a victory by a head over fellow Forego contender Warrior’s Club in the Grade 2 Churchill Downs at seven furlongs on May 5. After stretching out to a mile in running third in the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap on Belmont Stakes Day June 9, the Kentucky homebred returned to Belmont’s Big Sandy for a come-from-behind win by a neck over Whitmore in the Belmont Sprint Championship.
“I think every time you lead him out there, you can count on him giving you his best effort,” Colebrook said. “The times he hasn’t, it’s probably my fault and not his. He’s a very consistent horse and lays it on the line every time. He’s a very neat horse to be around.
“He’s doing great; his last two works have been phenomenal heading into the race,” he added. “He got a bit of a mini break coming off Belmont. We’re just expecting a good effort.”
Limousine Liberal drew the rail in the eight-horse Forego. He was installed as the 3-1 second choice on the morning line behind 9-5 favorite City of Light and will have jockey Jose Ortiz in the irons.
“The post is what it is; I probably wouldn’t have chosen 1, but he has won from there before [including the Belmont Sprint]. There doesn’t seem to be a lot of speed, so maybe he can get a good break,” Colebrook said. “There’s not a whole lot of pace, so maybe he’ll be a little closer than he normally is, but that will be up to Jose.”
Limousine Liberal is 5-2-1 in 10 career starts at the Forego distance, which Colebrook said suits his running style.
“As he’s gotten older, seven furlongs might be his best distance,” Colebrook said. “Earlier on, I would have said 6 to 6 ½ because he was just such a fast horse. Now, he’s learned to restrain his energy a little bit and come with that run late. As an older horse, he knows where the wire is. He’s always battling at the end in all his races and really lays it on the line. He’s been an amazing horse for us.”
A “Win and You’re In” qualifier for the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile, the Forego could allow Limousine Liberal to punch his ticket to another Grade 1 held near Colebrook’s base of operations in Kentucky, with Churchill hosting the two-day event in November.
“We stayed close to home and let him win a bunch of races last year and get some confidence with the idea of the Breeders’ Cup being in his backyard as a 6-year-old, so we really just focused and tried to figure out the best way of getting him there,” Colebrook said.
Colebrook said two of his juveniles who made their stakes debut earlier in the Saratoga meet – Knicks Go and Blame the Frog – are doing well training back at Keeneland. Blame the Frog, a Blame filly, ran 10th in the Grade 3 Schuylerville on July 20 after breaking her maiden at third asking on June 22 at Churchill.
“I gave them a little time after Saratoga,” Colebrook said. “Blame the Frog didn’t seem to handle the track that day. I just wanted to get her back home and give her a little bit of time after that race. I think sprinting on the grass could be something she could excel at.”
Knicks Go, a gray or roan son of Paynter, won his debut on July 4 at Ellis Park before finishing fifth in the Grade 3 Sanford on July 21 at the Spa.
“He didn’t run a bad race up here; we shipped him up here after a bit of a short rest, so we gave him some time afterwards,” Colebrook said. “That was the plan all along. We’re just going to concentrate on the fall campaign.”
* * *
G1 Ballerina entrant Highway Star ‘doing fine’ after pulling shoe in breeze
Chester and Mary Broman’s homebred Highway Star galloped Thursday morning for the first time since pulling a shoe during her final breeze for the Grade 1, $500,000 Ketel One Ballerina.
Highway Star lost her left hind shoe in a four-furlong bullet move on Monday, where she covered the distance in a sharp 46.88 seconds, the fastest of 90. Trainer Rodrigo Ubillo said he entered the 5-year-old Girolamo mare with the intention of monitoring that foot in the days leading up to Saturday’s race, a seven-furlong “Win and You’re In” qualifier for the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint.
“At the moment, it seems like it looked worse than it was. We put the shoe back on and she’s been training OK since then,” he said. “Yesterday, she just jogged, but she galloped very nicely this morning. I’m very happy with her; she’s doing fine at the moment. It’s one of those things; I didn’t want to miss out on the race if I didn’t enter and she turned out OK.”
Highway Star was a game second in last year’s Ballerina, finishing a head behind By the Moon. She came back from that effort to win the Grade 2 Gallant Bloom by a neck that September before finishing 11th to fellow Broman homebred Bar of Gold in the Filly & Mare Sprint.
This spring, the millionaire New York-bred rebounded from a disappointing fifth-place finish in the Heavenly Prize, her seasonal debut, with a much-improved second in the Grade 2 Ruffian. She followed that with a runner-up finish in the Critical Eye for New York-breds on May 28, where she was caught by a nose in the last jump by Holiday Disguise. Highway Star turned around on short rest 11 days later to finish second to fellow Ballerina entrant Lewis Bay in the Grade 3 Bed o’ Roses on June 8 during the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival.
Overall, Highway Star has a record of 8-5-2 from 19 career starts and earnings in excess of $1.1 million. Ubillo added that she runs well fresh, even if the spacing between the Bed o’ Roses and Ballerina was not necessarily by design.
“I went through the same thing last year when she ran in the Ogden Phipps, there’s nothing in between,” he said. “So, I ran in the New York-bred race, where she got beat by a nose, and then I ran her back. There was nothing else before the Ballerina, so I opted to go. She had only been training for about six days before that race and she got beat by like five lengths or something. It wasn’t an ideal thing; she likes time between races.”
Installed at 10-1 on the morning line for the Ballerina, Highway Star drew the outside post 9. Luis Saez is named to ride.