November 19, 2024

Gio Ponti keeping more weight in Dubai this time

Last updated: 3/22/11 4:44 PM


Three-time Eclipse Award winner GIO PONTI (Tale of the Cat), fourth in last
year’s Dubai World Cup (UAE-G1), toured the Meydan paddock Tuesday before having
a jog and a gallop. The six-year-old is acclimating to his surroundings,
according to Christophe Lorieul, assistant to trainer Christophe Clement.

“We took a couple of turns with the pony and he was very good in the
paddock,” said Lorieul, who rode the Kentucky-bred bay. “He was happy today —
he didn’t sweat as much.

“He has traveled better this year and has kept his condition. Last year, he
lost a lot more weight (on the trip to Dubai). Every day now he seems to be
getting better and better.”

Lorieul indicated that Gio Ponti may have “an easy piece of work” Wednesday.

TWICE OVER (GB) (Observatory) was a troubled 10th in the World Cup last year,
but his connections are confident he will turn in a better effort Saturday
night. Freshened up after successfully defending his title in the Champion S.
(Eng–G1) at Newmarket in October, the six-year-old was a smooth winner over
this course and distance in the Al Maktoum Challenge – Round 3 (UAE-G2) March 3.

“He is grand and is in good form,” regular rider Tom Queally said. “He just
did a routine piece of work (Tuesday) morning, and quickened down the straight.
It is a case of so far, so good, and he seems happy in himself, which is the
main thing.

“He was a good winner last time out and he quickened up well. He seems to
have tightened up since then, and we just need a bit of luck now. He will have a
blow out this Friday, and that will get him to the race.”

Japanese trainer Katsuhiko Sumii sent out his two runners, World Cup
contender VICTOIRE PISA (Neo Universe) and Dubai Sheema Classic (UAE-G1) hopeful
RULERSHIP (King Kamehameha) for a 1200-meter drill Tuesday morning.

Victoire
Pisa is one of three Japanese challengers for Saturday’s main event, along with
BUENA VISTA (Special Week) and TRANSCEND (Wild Rush), and Sumii thinks he’s
learned something from his former stable star Vodka, who came up short in three
Dubai appearances. Victoire Pisa, who defeated Buena Vista in the Arima Kinen
(Jpn-G1) December 26, tuned up for his big trip with a win in the Nakayama Kinen
(Jpn-G2) February 27.

“Vodka had a preparation to step up for the Dubai World Cup meetings, and I
thought it would be better for two of my horses to have a preparation race
before the big race,” Sumii said. “Victoire Pisa may go to Hong Kong after Dubai
this year, and also Rulership and Buena Vista have same owners, and also because
of the traveling expenses, we decided to trip to Dubai all together.

“Rulership and Victoire Pisa had good step-up races at home, which is good.
All of the members from Japan feel that we must work together for the victory,
and give all of the victims of earthquake-triggered tsunami hope.

“Since Victoire Pisa got in Dubai, he already had three steady gallops at
Meydan, so he has become more muscular physically. Rulership always shows
flexible strides and runs very lightly, and I think he satisfied with the
surface of all-weather. Both two of them run in the different races, so I
decided to give them galloping together.”














Champ Pegasus and Bourbon Bay turned in a thrilling stretch duel in the San Luis Obispo




(Benoit Photos)

CHAMP PEGASUS (Fusaichi Pegasus) will get another crack at his
Breeders’ Cup Turf (G1) conqueror DANGEROUS MIDGE (Lion Heart) in the
Dubai Sheema Classic. The bay will likely employ different tactics this
weekend, having attempted to make all the running at Churchill Downs.

“I thought if I take him back behind this pace, they are going to be
walking, and he’ll never have a chance to give it a go, so we put him on
the lead, and he ran great,” trainer Richard Mandella explained.
“(Jockey Frankie) Dettori (on Dangerous Midge) rode a great race that
day. He’d pressure us a little bit, then him alone. Then he’d pressure
us, just so he wouldn’t relax. Then he came the last time, and my horse
said, ‘That’s enough.'”

Champ Pegasus opened 2011 with a second to fellow Sheema challenger
BOURBON BAY (Sligo Bay [Ire]) in the San Marcos S. (G2) January 18, but
turned the tables on that rival in the San Luis Obispo S. (G2) February
19.

“I think his race the other day shows that he really does want to be taken
hold of,” Mandella added.

Dettori will ride Godolphin’s REWILDING (Tiger Hill) — a half-brother to
last year’s Sheema Classic heroine Dar Re Mi (GB) (Singspiel [Ire]) — in
Saturday’s $5 million event, so Martin Dwyer will take over on Dangerous Midge.

In other Dubai news:

Trainer John Moore, so successful at his Sha Tin base, is still looking for
his first international Group 1 victory, and will saddle DIM SUM (Kyllachy) and
SUNNY KING (Desert Sun [GB]) in Saturday’s Dubai Golden Shaheen (UAE-G1) in an
attempt to correct that oversight. Moore previously sent Viva Pataca out to a
runner-up finish in the 2008 Dubai Sheema Classic, while his One World (Danehill
Dancer) was third in last year’s Golden Shaheen.

“It’s a monkey that I really need to get off my back,” Moore acknowledged.
“I’ve had several runners run very well overseas without winning, and it’s
something that I feel I am going to achieve sooner or later. I would love if it
was in Dubai this weekend.”

Dim Sum, a seven-year-old, captured the Chairman’s Sprint Prize in February
for the second time, while Sunny King, aged eight, has given top Hong Kong
runner Beauty Flash (Golan [Ire]) a run for his money in his last two starts.

“I can’t really explain how or why they have reached such a level of form at
their age,” Moore offered. “Dim Sum seemed out of sorts last season, and the
only thing I did was to move him to a different stable in the barn. He is now
beside Viva Pataca, so maybe some of the champ’s old magic has rubbed off on
him!

“As for Sunny King, he has always been very consistent, but has somehow upped
his game recently. He should be well-suited to the Tapeta surface, because he
won four times on the Polytrack at Lingfield, a left-handed track like Meydan,
including a listed race over 1400 meters, before we bought him to race in Hong
Kong.”

Rider Darren Beadman, who sustained an ankle injury in Hong Kong last Sunday,
will be in his usual spot aboard Dim Sum.

“Darren was pretty badly bruised, but he will be okay for Saturday night,”
Moore added. “He wants to win this race as badly as I do, and it’s nice to be
going there with two decent each-way chances.”

“Dim Sum sustained a cut to his knee on the flight over from Hong Kong so he
needed to do some easier work (Tuesday),” Moore pointed out. “It’s nothing
serious, and has not needed suturing or anything like that, and I expect he will
be out on the all-weather track (Wednesday).

“They have both drawn well in low-to-middle gates, and there should be plenty
of speed in the race to suit them. I had One World run third in this race last
year, and I feel either of these two could match that or, with some luck, even
do better.”














The Golden Shaheen will mark Euroears’ debut on a synthetic surface




(Benoit Photos)

Trainer Bob Baffert, who won a pair of Dubai World Cups with Silver
Charm and Captain Steve, is back in the Emirate for the first time since
the latter’s win a decade ago. A lot has changed since then, and the
Hall of Fame conditioner was trying to get his bearings in Meydan.

“I was wandering around the grandstand when I heard a security guard
say, ‘Excuse me, sir. Can I see some identification?'” Baffert related.
“I said, ‘You’re looking at it. It’s my hair,'”

“This place is just awesome,” he reflected. “You see pictures of the
grandstand, but you can’t actually appreciate it until you’re here. You
could fit my whole hometown of Nogales, Arizona, inside that place —
all the people of Nogales could live in there — it’s unbelievable.”

Baffert went up to the grandstand’s fifth floor to observe his Dubai Golden
Shaheen contender EUROEARS (Langfuhr) breeze 600 meters in :35.26.

“I just wanted to give him a little spin out there,” said the silver-haired
conditioner, while pointing out his simple strategy for Saturday night. “He’s
one dimensional; he goes to the lead and stays there.”

In his first start for Baffert, the muscular Euroears ran his rivals off
their feet in the Palos Verdes S. (G2) at Santa Anita January 22.

“I was debating on whether to come or not, but I decided I was going to go
because this is a really nice horse,” Baffert said. “And it’s good to be back.”

Three fillies are set to take on the boys in the $2 million U.A.E. Derby
(UAE-G2) Saturday night, including trainer Mike de Kock’s twosome of MAHBOOBA
(Galileo [Ire]) and REEM (Galileo [Ire]), as well as Godolphin’s KHAWLAH (Cape
Cross [Ire]) from the Saeed bin Suroor shedrow. In her first start on Tapeta,
Khawlah trumped Mahbooba in the U.A.E. Oaks (UAE-G3) February 24.

“We were not surprised, because she is tough and strong,” bin Suroor said. “I
am really happy with her, and she has a good chance — maybe the best chance.”

In addition to Reem and Mahbooba, de Kock will lead over ZANZAMAR (Fort
Wood), who was second to SPLASH POINT (Street Cry [Ire]) last out in the U.A.E.
Two Thousand Guineas (UAE-G3) February 10.

“I maintain the fillies are better than the colts this year, and we have two
of the best,” de Kock affirmed. “Mahbooba will appreciate a good gallop, but
does have to reverse form with Khawlah. Reem has been a superstar and is tough.
She will run well, while Zanzamar is another who will be wanting a fast pace, as
stamina is his game.”

Reem, like Mahbooba a homebred of Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum,
trumped the boys last out in the March 3 Al Bastakiya S. in her fourth Carnival
start.














I Want Revenge’s last win occurred nearly two years ago in the Wood Memorial




(Lauren Pomeroy/Horsephotos.com)

I WANT REVENGE (Stephen Got Even), infamously scratched on the
morning of 2009 Kentucky Derby (G1), will be looking to get back in the
headlines after Saturday’s Godolphin Mile (UAE-G2). Together with
stablemate — and Al Quoz Sprint (UAE-G2) hopeful — STRADIVINSKY
(Stravinsky), the five-year-old is under the watchful eye of conditioner
Rick Dutrow assistant Michelle Nevin, as well as his brother and fellow
trainer Chip. In 2008, Dutrow fielded Golden Shaheen hero Benny the Bull
and Godolphin Mile victor Diamond Stripes.

“My brother Rick’s not coming, because I took his ticket,” Chip
Dutrow quipped. “When he asked me, I said I’m going this time. I missed
my chance to come to Dubai a few years back, so I said, ‘Man, now’s the
time, I’m gonna go check it out.’ I wanted to go last time with Benny
the Bull and Diamond Stripes, but I couldn’t get my passport done in
time, so I missed a party there.”

I Want Revenge made two starts as a four-year-old, finishing third in
both the Suburban H. (G2) and Philip H. Iselin S. (G3) last summer. In
his lone appearance since, the dark bay was part of a three-way photo
when fourth in the Donn H. (G1) February 5.

“He needed the run,” Nevin said. “He’s got no issues, and came out of
it well.”

South African champion J J THE JET PLANE (Jet Master) blew out down the
Meydan stretch Tuesday in advance of the Al Quoz Sprint, and will do the same
Thursday, according to trainer Michael “Lucky” Houdalakis.

Having captured the Hong Kong Sprint (HK-G1) in December, the seven-year-old
was a bit rusty when 11th in a local Tapeta handicap in February, but turned
things around with a 1200-meter victory on the turf March 10

“He needed his first run here, and I’d have been disappointed if he hadn’t
won next time,” Houdalakis said. “He’s very well, and my only concern is the
distance –maybe 1000 meters is a little on the short side for him these days.”