11/20/05
Last updated: 11/19/05 6:50 PM
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Evening Attire got back to his winning ways on Saturday
(Uli Seit/Horsephotos.com) |
EVENING ATTIRE (Black Tie Affair [Ire]) put the skeptics firmly in their
place by fighting hard to register a neck victory over a stubborn West Virginia
(Tomorrows Cat) in Saturday’s
$108,600
Stuyvesant H. (G3) at Aqueduct. The final time for the
nine-furlong contest on a fast track was 1:51 1/5. The seven-year-old
campaigner, winless for more than a year since his victory in the Saratoga Breeders’
Cup H. (G2) in August 2004, asserted his class edge over his rivals and proved
that he’s still a force to be reckoned with on the New York scene.
The race began with a stark twist in the expected plot. Kennel Up (Joyeux
Danseur), forecast to be the early leader, was caught napping at the break and
never recovered sufficiently to put himself in his preferred position. The
front-running mantle instead fell on the able shoulders of 2-1 favorite Aggadan
(Carnivalay), who waltzed through leisurely fractions of :25, :49 4/5, and 1:14.
Tracking the leader’s every move, West Virginia then pounced to gain a narrow
advantage at the top of the stretch. However, Jose Santos had already guided Evening
Attire into closer striking position along the rail, and the gray was moving
ominously well as he angled out for a clear run through the lane. Still, there
was no quit in either West Virginia or Aggadan, both resolutely staying on.
Evening Attire had a real battle on his hands, but in the waning yards, he
summoned his reserves of class to thrust his neck in front at the wire.
Coupled with entrymate Dr. Rockett (Regal Classic), who trailed home last of
six, Evening Attire was sent off as the lukewarm 7-2 third choice, paying $9,
$4.20 and $2.60, while crowning an exacta worth $42.60. West Virginia returned
$5.30 and $2.80, and Aggadan was good for $2.20 while completing the $98.50
trifecta (1-4-2). The tardy Kennel Up managed fourth, followed by Spite the
Devil (Devil His Due) and Dr. Rockett.
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According to Santos, trainer Pat Kelly had advised that Evening Attire “would
run if he took me up close to the race.” The winning rider went on to say that
his mount had more up his sleeve than he revealed.
“I knew I was going to win at
the quarter pole,” Santos said. “He just took off. I think he did enough just to
get by.”
Kelly was delighted with his charge’s effort.
“He likes the two turns. When
he is up there, stalking horses, he is happy,” Kelly said. “He is a
tough son of a gun and he is a nice horse. He has been great to us and we just
love him to death.”
Kelly conditions Evening Attire for his father, retired Hall of Fame trainer
Thomas J. Kelly, and Joseph and Mary Grant. The elder Kelly, in partnership with
Joseph Grant, bred the gelding in Kentucky.
The all-in-the-family theme continues in that Evening Attire is a
half-brother to his entrymate, Dr. Rockett, both being produced by the Our
Native mare Concolour, who is also the dam of a yearling colt named Tacticianor
(Tactical Cat) and a weanling filly by Grindstone. The victor’s record now stands at 12 wins and 16 placings
from 45 career starts, with a bankroll to the tune of $2,483,351. His biggest
score came in the 2002 Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1).