“If the colt keeps doing well I am sure we would like to (go on to
Wilkinson was coming off a wide-trip third to the well-regarded
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When New York shipper Pants on Fire secured the lead in the short field of
five, Justin Phillip recovered from a bobbling start and advanced out wide into
a pace-prompting second. Wilkinson, who was reserved in fourth through the
opening quarter in :24 4/5, crept forward along the rail down the backstretch.
He overtook Action Ready (More Than Ready) for third by the time Pants on Fire
reached the half-mile in :48 4/5, and moved into second at the six-furlong mark
in 1:13 3/5. By that time, Justin Phillip was coming under pressure, and he
would come up completely empty down the lane.
Meanwhile, Pants on Fire kept to his task and still maintained a one-length
lead in midstretch. Wilkinson was the only threat, and he appeared to be in
tight quarters on the fence. Yet he still had enough room, and time, and he made
the most of it. Showing both poise and resolve, Wilkinson pursued his quarry to
the very end, clawing back the yardage close home to get up at the wire. The 3-1
third choice completed the mile and 40 yards in 1:40 4/5 on the fast track and rewarded his
backers with $8, $3.40 and $4.60.
“He’s still learning how to run, but he pays attention,” Gomez said. “Neil
just told me to have confidence in this horse so I did.
“I thought four or five times he was going to go by and tightened it up a
couple of times on him just to have him look a little bit. That’s a young
three-year-old. That’s what they do. They are still learning how to run. When
they get to certain situations they seem to really pay attention to some
things. Once he got his head in front you can see him accelerate right away. I
thought four or five times down the lane he was going to do that. It took him a
while, but he finally got by the horse and got it done.”
Joe Bravo, who almost pulled off the wire job aboard Pants on Fire, recapped
his trip while complementing the winner.
“We had a really nice first turn and it set up good,” Bravo said. “I was
really happy to see (Steve) Asmussen’s horse (Justin Phillip) not going with us
into the first turn, and he kind of used his horse to get up with us on the
backside.
“Honestly, I take my hat off to Garrett Gomez’s horse,” Bravo added. “That
was a lot of effort. My horse was there and he ran hard. It was a great horse
race.
“I hate to be the guy who got beat but, you know, this was the horse’s first
time here, coming into town. This is a nice horse. He was giving it all. He had
his ears pinned, and he was trying.”
Asmussen regretted the colt’s problematic break.
“(Jockey Shaun Bridgmohan) said he didn’t break and then he just ran
Wilkinson’s victorious stakes debut improved his mark to 5-2-2-1, $105,490.
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“I think he was a little bit flat in his last race but nonetheless ran well,”
Howard said. “Then he seemed like he had a lot of spring in his step couple of
days after that race, and his breezes were letter-perfect. He came to the race
in great shape — weight was good, and his coat was good.
“I trained him as if we were going to the race,” Howard added of his thought
process in advance of the Lecomte. “I didn’t want to train him any lighter or
differently. I figured if we were going to make the decision to go to the race,
I figured he needed to train in a normal pattern.
The Kentucky-bred is the first foal from the Canadian Grade 3-placed Tasha’s
Delight (Afternoon Deelites), who has since produced an unnamed juvenile colt by
Smart Strike and a yearling full sister to Wilkinson. Tasha’s Delight is in turn
a full sister to Grade 2 heroine Miss Pickums. Wilkinson comes from the female
line of Grade 1 queen Delicate Vine (Knights Choice), the dam of Grade 2 victor
Altazarr (Relaunch). Other notables in the family include Grade 1 winners
Georgie Boy (Tribal Rule) and Celtic Melody (Mr. Greeley) as well as Grade 2
scorers Rendezvous (Victory Gallop) and House of Fortune (Free House).