Presenting the trophy for the stakes, formerly known as the San
“It couldn’t be better than to have this race named for Bobby,” said
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“Winning the race named for Frankel is significant,” Cecil said. “Since I
came to California, he’s the trainer I’ve had certainly the most respect for, so
it’s great to win.”
Owned by Cecil’s wife Kristina in partnership with Zillah Reddam,
Spring Style was registering her first stakes credit after six unplaced
attempts. Her breakthrough was assisted by new rider Garrett Gomez, who
positioned her perfectly through a dawdling pace. Spring Style stalked
in second, lapped right onto the flank of 28-1 longshot Powerofvoodoo
(Unusual Heat), as the leader doled out fractions of :25 2/5, :51 1/5
and 1:16 on the firm turf. Go Forth North (North Light [Ire]) scraped
the paint in third, and Harmonious was reserved in fourth in the compact
field.
On the far turn, Harmonious began to advance, and the prohibitive favorite
appeared ready to swoop once straightening into the stretch. Just as Harmonious
dallied and gawked to her right, as though tempted to veer outside as she had
done in the Del Mar Oaks (G1), Spring Style was launching her well-timed
challenge. She mastered the tiring Powerofvoodoo with a minimum of fuss and
edged clear, building up enough of a cushion to withstand the belated rush of
Harmonious.
Spring Style toured 1 1/8 miles on the firm turf in 1:51 and returned $15.80
and $3.60. There was no show wagering.
“She can get a little lazy if she’s up front on her own,” Cecil noted, “so I
told Garrett, ‘Just sit right off somebody if you can,’ and he rode her perfect.
I did (think I won it) when I was sitting down, but as I walked down and watched
the head bob, I wasn’t totally sure. It’s huge. It makes her worth quite a bit
of money now. She’s got a reasonable pedigree and Pivotal is the leading sire in
Europe.”
“I thought she (Harmonious) made one run at me going to the three-eighths
pole,” Gomez recapped. “When I first turned for home, I took another peek out
there, and she was having trouble getting to me. We went so slow, it’s hard to
really come by a horse that’s trying to finish. Even though she’s a good
finisher, when you come home quick like we did, it’s hard to pass horses. The
last three-eighth’s of a mile we picked it up and came home really solid. It’s
hard to make up ground when it’s like that.
“I don’t think she (Spring Style) has had softer fractions like that. She was
dictating what went on, and I felt like she was handling everything I wanted her
to throughout the race. My idea, when I looked at the Form, was that I was going
to put her on the lead. Ben (Cecil) didn’t want her on the lead. So I just let
her break, and I left her on a long hold. She’s not that fast anyway, but I
wasn’t going to take something that was coming easy to her, and take it away
from her.”
Harmonious gave back $2.10 after crossing
the wire 1 1/4 lengths ahead of the 5-2 Go Forth North. The $1 exacta was good
for $10.70, and the $1 trifecta totaled $17.80. Powerofvoodoo reported home
another five lengths back.
“No pace. They went too slow,” lamented trainer John Shirreffs regarding
Harmonious’ narrow defeat.
Spring Style’s scorecard now stands at 16-5-1-2, $245,477. The six-year-old
mare raced once in England as a juvenile, finishing third in a Wolverhampton
maiden, and was sold the following month for $89,408 at the 2007 Tattersalls
December Sale. Thereafter joining Cecil, Spring Style had cleared her maiden and
entry-level allowance conditions by the end of 2008, but raced only twice in
2009, including a fifth in the La Canada S. (G2) in her stakes debut. Again
trying stakes company in 2010, she found life difficult at that level. Her best
result was a distant fourth to Zenyatta in the August 7 Clement L. Hirsch S.
(G1), in a six-horse field. Spring Style was freshened following a last-place
effort in the August 15 John C. Mabee S. (G2), returning to capture a November
19 allowance at Hollywood.
Bred by Frank Dunne in Ireland, Spring Style was produced by the Irish River
(Fr) mare Clear Spring. Her third dam, group stakes producer Tertiary (*Vaguely
Noble), is a full sister to Grade/Group 1 star Nobiliary, queen of the 1975
Washington D.C. International (G1). They are half-sisters to influential sire
and multiple French Group 1 hero Lyphard (Northern Dancer). Others of note in
the family include dual Australian classic winner Magical Miss (Danehill);
accomplished Japanese performer Seeking the Pearl (Seeking the Gold), who became
a French highweight by plundering the Prix Maurice de Gheest (Fr-G1); and Grade
1 scorers Another Review (Buckaroo), No Review (Nodouble) and Urbane (Citidancer),
the latter the dam of multiple Grade 2 victor Suave (A.P. Indy).