Not nearly as quick leaving the stalls as he was in his prior start, the
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Of the initial top four, only Roaring Lion failed to go on as the field came
through the homestretch. A furlong out, Fleet Valid and Sacred Journey were
still heads apart as Ravalo tried to make a race of it on the outside while
Vineyard Haven still trying to find some preferred footing inside those three.
The favorite finally did with a sixteenth to go, showing push-button
acceleration to win going away.
“During the first part of the race I wasn’t sure we were going to get be able
to get there but when the rail opened my horse just started running for the
hole,” Garcia said.
“It is very difficult for a three-year-old to compete against a solid field
of older sprinters as he did today,” said Rick Mettee, assistant to trainer
Saeed bin Suroor. “Going three-quarters instead of seven-eighths makes it an
entirely different race. These horses run hard every step. Most have a good
amount of speed themselves and they don’t stop until the wire.”
Ravalo, who was carried out in midstretch by a tiring Sacred Journey, could
not match the winner’s burst and settled for second. He returned $4.40 and $3
and completed the $16.80 exacta. A half-length further back was Fleet Valid, who
paid $3.40 and capped the $60.20 trifecta. The superfecta with Sacred Journey
returned $368.40. Next under the line were Ah Day (Malibu Moon), Peace Chant
(War Chant), Roaring Lion and True Quality (Elusive Quality). Saratoga Russell
(Trippi) was withdrawn.
Vineyard Haven was bred in Florida by original owner/trainer Lynn Scace, who
campaigned the colt to his debut win at Calder in June of last year. He was
privately bought after that win for a partnership headed by Hall of Fame trainer
Bobby Frankel, who conditioned the gray to a third in the Sanford S. (G2) and
scores in the Hopeful S. (G1) and Champagne S. (G1) by margins of 2 1/4 lengths
and 5 3/4 lengths, respectively. Frankel and company subsequently sold Vineyard
Haven to Godolphin, who sent the colt to Dubai to prepare for the Kentucky Derby
(G1), but he made only one start over there when a distant fourth in the U.A.E.
Two Thousand Guineas (UAE-G3). He was sidelined until the King’s Bishop, where
he led throughout and crossed the wire a head in front of Capt. Candyman Can
(Candy Ride [Arg]), but was demoted to second after interfering with the
runner-up in the stretch. With this third top-level score, Vineyard Haven has
now bankrolled $671,500 from a line of 7-4-1-1.
Vineyard Haven was produced by Princess Aloha (Aloha Prospector), making him a
half-brother to the multiple stakes winner On the Vineyard (Lite the Fuse).