CANDY MAN ROCKET SET TO RETURN FOR LAMBHOLM SOUTH TAMPA BAY DERBY
By Mike Henry —-
CANDY MAN ROCKET SET TO RETURN FOR LAMBHOLM SOUTH TAMPA BAY DERBY; LATE PICK-5 CARRYOVER FOR WEDNESDAY OF $45,742.71; ULTIMATE 6 HIT
OLDSMAR, FL. – Candy Man Rocket, who burst onto the scene as a legitimate Triple Crown candidate by winning the Grade III Sam F. Davis Stakes here on Feb. 6, and Grade III 2-year-old winner Sittin On Go are expected to head a large field in Saturday’s Grade II, $400,000 Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby.
The 41st annual Tampa Bay Downs showcase is one of five stakes races scheduled on the Festival Day 41 Presented by Lambholm South card. The mile-and-a-sixteenth race for 3-year-olds on the main dirt track is a “Road to the Kentucky Derby” points race, with the top four finishers earning 50, 20, 10 and 5 points toward qualifying for a spot in the Run for the Roses starting gate at Churchill Downs on May 1.
Also scheduled Saturday are the Grade II, $225,000 Hillsborough Stakes, for older fillies and mares at a mile-and-an-eighth on the turf; the Grade III, $200,000 Florida Oaks, for 3-year-old fillies ar a mile-and-a-sixteenth on the turf; the Grade III, $100,000 Michelob Ultra Challenger Stakes, for horses 4-years-old-and-upward at a mile-and-a-sixteenth on the main track; and the ungraded $75,000 Columbia Stakes, for 3-year-olds going a mile on the turf.
As is always the case this time of year, the majority of attention will shift to the 3-year-old Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve hopefuls.
Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott – who won the 2019 Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby with Tacitus and that year’s Kentucky Derby with Country House, with Tacitus finishing third – sent Candy Man Rocket out for a 4-furlong breeze today at his Payson Park Training Center base in Indiantown, Fla., where the Frank Fletcher Racing Operations-owned colt turned in a time of 48 3/5 seconds, the best of 36 workouts at the half-mile distance.
“He was on his own, he went well and I’m very pleased with him. He looked as smooth as silk,” Mott said via telephone. “He is a good work horse anyway, but I liked the way he did it. The (Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby) has been on our minds since he won the Sam F. Davis. Any time you get a horse that runs well over that racetrack, you have to give it consideration.”
While Kentucky Derby qualifying points can be very crucial, Mott knows the important thing at this stage is to continue to build on the colt’s foundation for a possible try at a mile-and-a-quarter at ChurchillDowns. “It seems like he is doing equally as well now as he was before the Davis,” Mott said. “He’s got good natural speed away from the gate, which can always be an advantage for any horse, position-wise. The chances of getting a good trip might be better than they would for a deep closer, especially in a big field.”
Junior Alvarado will again come up from Gulfstream Park to ride Candy Man Rocket.
Mott said the owner, Frank Fletcher, is excited about Candy Man Rocket’s chances to be the first horse to complete the Sam F. Davis-Tampa Bay Derby double since Destin in 2016. “He is someone who is enthusiastic about his horses, loves the game and is happy just to have a horse in a race like this,” Mott said.
The trainer said he is still debating the next start for his Sam F. Davis runner-up, breeder-owner Michael Shanley’s Nova Rags, who won the Pasco Stakes here on Jan. 16. Mott said the March 13 Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn, the March 20 TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby at Fair Grounds and the March 27 Curlin Florida Derby Presented by Hill ‘n’ Dale Farms at Xalapa are all under consideration.
Sittin On Go, who won the Grade III Iroquois Stakes last September at Churchill Downs, is expected to make his first start since a sixth-place finish on Jan. 30 in the Grade III Holy Bull Stakes at Gulfstream Park. The Albaugh Family Stables-owned colt is trained by Dale Romans.
Also expected to compete in the Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby are the third and fourth-place finishers in the Sam F. Davis, Hidden Stash and the gelding Boca Boy. Hidden Stash is owned by BBN Racing and trained by Victoria Oliver and Boca Boy is owned by Kenneth E. Fishbein and trained by Cheryl Winebaugh.
Trainer Todd Pletcher, who has won the Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby a record five times, including three in a row from 2015-2017, is expected to return with Woodford Thoroughbreds and WinStar Farm’s Promise Keeper. The colt broke his maiden on Feb. 6 at Gulfstream in his second start, winning a mile maiden special weight race by 5 lengths on a sloppy track.
Pletcher is also expected to enter Whisper Hill Farm’s Unbridled Honor, who broke his maiden here on the Sam F. Davis undercard going a mile-and-40 yards.
King of Dreams, who broke his maiden at Gulfstream on Jan. 30, is expected to start for owner Victoria’s Ranch and trainer Juan Carlos Avila, the same connections who won last year’s Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby with 49-1 shot King Guillermo. Victoria’s Ranch is the stable name for retired major league slugger Victor Martinez.
Mark Casse, who sent out Prospective to win the 2012 Tampa Bay Derby, is expected to enter D. J. Stable’s Helium. The colt was 2-for-2 as a 2-year-old, winning the 7-furlong Display Stakes on Oct. 18 on the all-weather synthetic Tapeta track at Woodbine in Toronto.
Other likely Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby entrants include trainer Shawn H. Davis’s Hello Hot Rod, a winner of three of four lifetime starts, including the Jimmy Winkfield Stakes on Jan. 31 at Aqueduct; Moonlite Strike, trainer Saffie A. Joseph, Jr.’s colt who is 2-for-4; Joseph’s Super Strong, whose lone start on Dec. 19 at Camarero resulted in a victory in the Grade I Classico Agustin Mercado Revron Stakes; and My Liberty, a maiden winner from the barn of Maria Ines Mejia.
Tampa Bay Downs trainer Arnaud Delacour is expected to seek his first Hillsborough Stakes victory with lightly-raced 4-year-old Magic Attitude, a Great Britain-bred filly who won the Grade I Belmont Oaks Invitational on Sept. 19 in her first start in the United States. Magic Attitude, who is owned by Lael Stables, is unraced since finishing third on Oct. 10 at Keeneland in the Grade I Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup Stakes Presented by Dixiana.
Mott is expected to enter 4-year-old Ireland-bred filly New York Girl, the runner-up here in last month’s Grade III Lambholm South Endeavour Stakes. Other Hillsborough probables include trainer Josie Carroll’s 5-year-old mare Court Return, second in the Grade I E. P. Taylor Stakes in October at Woodbine; multiple-stakes winner Myhartblongstodady, a 6-year-old mare trained by Jorge Abreu; stakes-winning 6-year-old mare La Signare, from the barn of Brendan Walsh; Morning Molly, a recent stakes winner trained by Tom Proctor; and trainer Victoria Oliver’s 4-year-old filly How Ironic.
The Florida Oaks, which was moved from the main track to the turf course in 2011, could represent another win opportunity for the Lael Stables-Delacour partnership in Be Sneaky, who finished second in the Suncoast Stakes here on Feb. 6. Be Sneaky would be making her first start on the turf.
Trainer H. Graham Motion, who won that first turf running of the Florida Oaks with Dynamic Holiday, is expected to have two runners, both 2-for-2 on the turf in their youthful careers. Gainesway Stable’s Oyster Box won an allowance/optional claiming race here on Jan. 6 in her most recent start, while Mia Martina, owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Gianni Fittipaldi, did likewise four days later at Gulfstream.
Also expected for the Oaks are Starlight Racing’s Jouster, who has turned into a different sort after being switched to the turf two starts back by Pletcher, posting a pair of wire-to-wire victories; Forever Boss, who broke her maiden on Feb. 14 at Gulfstream via disqualification for trainer Ken McPeek; Queen of the Green, who won an allowance/optional claiming race here on Feb. 10 for conditioner Jon Arnett; and Por Que No, a two-time winner for trainer Kent Sweezey.
In the Challenger Stakes, 4-year-old colt Letmeno, trained by Ian Wilkes, is expected to seek his first stakes triumph after being disqualified from an apparent victory last summer in the Iowa Derby at Prairie Meadows.
Wilkes has fond memories of the Michelob Ultra Challenger. He won the race in 2012 with Janis Whitham’s 4-year-old Fort Larned, a result no one outside Tampa Bay Downs paid much attention to at the time. Fort Larned went on that season to win a pair of Grade III stakes, the Grade I Whitney Invitational Handicap at Saratoga and the Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita.
The Columbia Stakes is expected to draw at least 10 horses. The 3-year-old gelding Mira Mission, who has won two of three starts for trainer Thomas Bush, and trainer George Weaver’s Whatmakessammyrun are among the likely starters along with the Mott-trained Crew Dragon and Pletcher’s Winfromwithin.
Around the oval. No one hit the late Pick-5 today, creating a carryover pool of $45,742.71 into Wednesday’s late Pick-5. One bettor hit the 20-cent Ultimate 6, earning $119,339.10. The wager requires bettors to select the winners of the last six races. The winning combination was 2-6-1-2-4-4.
James B. Begg earned his first career training victory from his seventh start in the ninth race on the turf, winning with 4-year-old filly Stuy Town Baby. She is owned by C T R Stables and was ridden by Hector Diaz, Jr.
Thoroughbred racing continues Wednesday with a nine-race card beginning at 12:15 p.m. Tampa Bay Downs currently races on a Wednesday-Friday-Saturday-Sunday schedule. The track is open every day for simulcast wagering, no-limits action and tournament play in The Silks Poker Room and golf fun and instruction at The Downs Golf Practice Facility.