November 23, 2024

Shakin It Up gives Baffert his eighth San Vicente

Last updated: 2/17/13 8:39 PM











Shakin It Up’s pedigree is laden with Baffert champions
(Benoit Photos)





Mike Pegram and Dennis Cardoza’s Shakin It Up sliced between foes and drove
to a one-length decision in Sunday’s Grade 2, $150,250
San
Vicente
at Santa Anita, handing Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert his eighth
victory in the seven-furlong affair for sophomores. At the same time, the Triple
Crown nominee became the first graded winner sired by champion sprinter Midnight
Lute, himself a former Baffert trainee.

Shakin It Up, a hard-luck third in the Grade 3 Hollywood Prevue when last
seen on Thanksgiving Day, was one of a trio of Baffert entrants. He went off as
the second choice at 2-1, with stablemate Belvin slightly preferred at 9-5, and
Baffert’s third entrant, War Academy, a tepid 6-1 fourth choice in the six-horse
field.

Reunited Sunday with David Flores, who had ridden him to his impressive
maiden triumph two starts back, Shakin It Up sat behind the early speed. The
rail-drawn Belvin vied with Caballo del Cielo through an opening quarter in :22
4/5, and was a half-length up by the time he reached the half in :45 3/5. Mudflats ranged up
briefly into an outside contending position on the far turn, while Shakin It Up
was having to bide his time along the inside for running room.

There was to be no repeat, however, of his problematic passage in the
Hollywood Prevue. As Caballo del Cielo drifted out swinging into the stretch,
Shakin It Up got the crucial split that Flores had patiently awaited, and he
took it.

But once drawing up between Belvin and Caballo del Cielo, Shakin It Up did
not immediately stamp his authority. The short field was fanned out across the
track, nearly all in with a chance, and the deep-closing Treasury Bill looming
boldly widest of all.

Then, inside the final furlong, Shakin It Up began to rev up. Lengthening
stride, he pulled clear to stop the teletimer in 1:22 2/5 on the fast track and
returned $6.40, $3.80 and $2.80.

“It reminds me of the good ol’ days,” Flores said. “It brings me back to a
time when I was riding these kind of horses, and it’s good to be back on a horse
like this.

“He put me in a spot I wasn’t expecting. He put me in the race right away, so
I just had to be patient and wait for the pocket to open, and that’s pretty much
what happened. When I asked him to go he accelerated, a tremendous
acceleration.”

Flores has faith in Shakin It Up’s capacity to go a distance — even the
classic distance.

“I say a mile and a quarter — that will be (Bob) Baffert’s job,” Flores
said. “All I have to do is do the right thing on the horse when I get on him. I
want to thank Bob and Mike Pegram and all the rest of the crew; it’s amazing to
be on a horse like this.

“That’s my dream that I’m chasing every day (to ride a Derby horse). I still
go to the mountains to keep myself in great shape because you never know when
it’s going to come. You have to be prepared for a horse like this.”










David Flores is excited by Shakin It Up’s potential
(Benoit Photos)





“He’s (David Flores) done well with him,” Baffert said, “and I was sort of
mad at myself for taking him off (in the Hollywood Prevue, when Martin Garcia
was given the call). I was trying to help Martin out a little bit, but I put
David back on and he gets along with him pretty well.

“I really don’t know (what race might be next). He was sort of fresh today. I
didn’t really have him super-cranked up for the race, but we’ve always thought
highly of him, so we’ll just find something for him, I don’t know.

“We’ve always thought this was a very good horse. It was a very good race —
it was a tough race,” Baffert said.

Treasury Bill was a strong second in an effort that delighted trainer Ron
Ellis. The Lemon Drop Kid colt, who is bred to relish two turns, will now
stretch out for the Grade 2 Rebel at Oaklawn March 16.

Unlike the San Vicente, which was not a scoring race on the new Kentucky
Derby points system, the Rebel is part of the Kentucky Derby Championship Series
worth 50 points to the winner.

“He started to pull Joe (Talamo) a little earlier than I thought he would
down the backside,” Ellis said of Treasury Bill’s performance in the San
Vicente. “He got up a little bit closer and got forced a bit wide, but he ran
hard, he ran game. I didn’t really think he could compete with these kind of
horses going seven furlongs, so I’m very happy.



“The plan, timing wise, was a month from now, go to the Rebel at Oaklawn. I
think we might go there. The Wests (owners Gary and Mary) have Flashback (Baffert’s
top three-year-old) who will run in the races here (the Grade 2 San Felipe on
March 9), so they don’t want to hook them up together. So the plan is to go to
the Rebel.”

Caballo del Cielo checked in another three-quarters of a length back in
third, followed by War Academy, Mudflats and Belvin. The entire field was
separated by fewer than three lengths at the wire.

Shakin It Up was flattering the form of stablemate Super Ninety Nine, the 7-5
morning-line favorite in Monday’s Grade 3 Southwest at Oaklawn. Runner-up to
Super Ninety Nine in their mutual debut over the San Vicente track and trip
October 7, Shakin It Up crushed an October 27 maiden by 4 1/2 lengths. He tried
stakes company for the first time in the Hollywood Prevue, where he came around
horses belatedly and was finishing fastest of all in third, just a neck back of
second-placer Super Ninety Nine.

Shakin It Up lost some training time in January, reportedly because of a foot
abscess, but he is clearly back in business now. His resume now stands at
4-2-1-1, $139,600.

Bred by Pegram in Kentucky, Shakin It Up is the second registered foal from
the unraced mare Silver Bullet Moon, a daughter of two Baffert stars — champion
Vindication and Hall of Famer Silverbulletday. A two-time Eclipse Award winner,
Silverbulletday earned more than $3 million while capturing such Grade 1 events
as the 1998 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies and 1999 Kentucky Oaks, Alabama,
Ashland and Gazelle. She has produced the stakes-placed Tice and factors as the
granddam of stakes winner Crisis of Spirit and the stakes-placed Mile High
Magic.

Shakin It Up is closely related to stablemate Govenor Charlie, a fellow
Triple Crown nominee who broke his maiden for Baffert and Pegram in Sunday’s 5TH
race at Santa Anita. Govenor Charlie is also by Midnight Lute and out of another
daughter of Silverbulletday, Silverbulletway.

Baffert commented on Midnight Lute’s emergence as a sire, and explained why
the two-time Breeders’ Cup Sprint winner shouldn’t be typecast as a speed
influence.

“Early on, (Midnight Lute) had an infection in his throat. That’s why his
throat went bad. He would have run all day, Midnight Lute,” the Hall of Famer
noted. “Unfortunately, he had 60 percent air capacity, but all his foals breathe
fine. With him it was probably because he was so big, but it’s pretty
encouraging, it’s pretty exciting.”

Silverbulletday hails from the family of Grade 1 winners Forest Secrets,
Fourty Niners Son and Cindy’s Hero. Further back, one finds another Hall of
Famer in Arts and Letters, the runner-up in the 1969 Kentucky Derby and
Preakness who went on to conquer the Belmont Stakes, Metropolitan Handicap,
Travers, Woodward and Jockey Club Gold Cup.



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