November 20, 2024

Road to the Triple Crown

Last updated: 2/21/06 11:32 PM


ROAD TO THE TRIPLE CROWN

FEBRUARY 22, 2006

by James Scully

BLUEGRASS CAT (Storm Cat), who wrapped up last season with victories in the
Remsen S. (G2) and Nashua S. (G3), opened his three-year-old campaign with a
solid 1 1/4-length win in Saturday’s Sam F. Davis S. at Tampa Bay Downs. His
performance was encouraging on several fronts.

After winning the Remsen wire to wire, the WinStar homebred was eager to run
early before settling into a perfect stalking trip under John Velazquez. The bay
colt offered a nice three-wide move on the far turn to reach the front in upper
stretch, but he still had some work left as the stubborn DEPUTY GLITTERS (Deputy
Commander) continued to battle on determinedly. Bluegrass Cat eventually put his
nemesis away and drew off late, finishing the 1 1/16-mile test in a
stakes-record 1:44, four-fifths of a second off the track record. The Todd Pletcher trainee registered a 101 BRIS Speed rating.

Bluegrass Cat displayed plenty of promise but didn’t earn overwhelming Speed
ratings at two, and any number under 100 would’ve been a disappointment in his
three-year-old debut. He still hasn’t faced top-class competition, but
Bluegrass Cat received a good test on Saturday and passed it in admirable
fashion. Saturday’s race was only the starting point on his road to the Kentucky
Derby (G1), and we can expect further improvement in his upcoming prep races.

Pletcher and Velazquez both have a chance to win their first Kentucky Derby, but if doesn’t happen this year, the multiple Eclipse Award winners figure to
get plenty of opportunities in the future. The same can’t said of Bluegrass
Cat’s sire, the great Storm Cat. The 23-year-old stallion has never sired a
Kentucky Derby winner or even a runner-up.

However, we can always wonder “what if.” What if Giant’s Causeway had remained in the United
States instead of being sent to Europe? What if the track hadn’t come up sloppy
in 1994? Tabasco Cat easily captured the Preakness S. (G1) and Belmont S. (G1)
that year, but his connections blamed his sixth-place Derby finish upon a sealed
track over which he couldn’t get his footing.

Cat Thief, who was beaten only a length when third in the 1999 Kentucky
Derby, is Storm Cat’s best Kentucky Derby performer so far. Mr. Prospector
finally sired a Kentucky Derby winner, Fusaichi Pegasus in 2000, from one of his
latter crops, and perhaps Storm Cat will follow suit in 2006. Bluegrass Cat
certainly has the breeding on his female side. His dam, the unraced She’s a
Winner, is by A.P. Indy and hails from outstanding bloodlines, with her maternal
granddam being Dance Number (Northern Dancer).

With a winter storm moving through Hot Springs, Arkansas, last weekend,
Oaklawn Park officials were forced to cancel racing and reschedule the Southwest
S. for this Saturday. LAWYER RON (Langfuhr), MUSIC SCHOOL (A.P. Indy) and
STEPPENWOLFER (Aptitude) are among the contenders expected for the one-mile
event. There are no graded stakes for three-year-olds this weekend.

In other news, trainer Michael Matz made the surprise announcement that
BARBARO (Dynaformer) will race only once more, the Florida Derby (G1) on April
1, before the Kentucky Derby. With his last appearance coming in the February 4
Holy Bull S. (G3), the well-regarded sophomore will be left with only one prep
in the 13 weeks leading up to the Run for the Roses.

Only one start in the 13 weeks before the Kentucky Derby? Say it isn’t so. No
tiger has the same stripes and all horses are different, but the Kentucky Derby
is a 1 1/4-mile beast that eats up lightly raced horses. Matz, who has never had
a Kentucky Derby starter, couldn’t be taking a bigger chance with the future of Barbaro. No horse in his lifetime has won the Kentucky Derby with only one race
in the previous 13 weeks, and I would ask who is the last horse to enter the
Kentucky Derby under the same scenario (or worse) and then capture a Grade 1 event
later in his career? Barbaro’s connections can only hope that he will be the
first.