November 19, 2024

Miss Match just edges Switch in Santa Margarita

Last updated: 3/12/11 8:43 PM








Miss Match earned her first
stakes win stateside in the Santa Margarita

(Benoit Photos)

Matthew Cloros’ MISS MATCH (Arg) (Indygo Shiner) entered Saturday’s
$300,000

Santa Margarita Invitational (G1)
at Santa Anita already owning a
Group 1 victory from her native Argentina. She exited the nine-furlong
test with another top-level win after just getting her head in front of
La Brea S. (G1) victress Switch (Quiet American) to score under jockey
Garrett Gomez.

The excitement of the photo finish was marred, though, when
pacesetter Always a Princess (Leroidesanimaux [Brz]) fell nearing the
wire. Winner of the La Canada S. (G2) and El Encino S. (G2) over
champion Blind Luck (Pollard’s Luck) in her past two, the chestnut miss
took a bad step in the stretch and was being pulled up by jockey Martin
Garcia when she suddenly went down.

“I was riding and I just heard a ‘pop.’ I tried to pull her up, but
she was running,” a shaken Garcia said.

HRTV reported following the race that Always a Princess had fractured
both sesamoids and would have surgery on Monday. While her racing career
is over, there is hope she can begin a new career in the breeding shed.

“It’s her (left front) ankle, but she’ll be all right,” her trainer, Bob
Baffert, said. “She ran so hard, I think she was just exhausted and went to lay
down, you know. She took care of herself. It (the ankle) didn’t go down. I feel
a lot better about it.”

With tragedy apparently averted, Miss Match’s connections celebrated her
Santa Margarita victory. The dark bay mare was close to the early pace set by
Always a Princess, running in third through splits of :23 1/5 and :46 1/5, but
dropped back a bit on the backstretch. She came out in the stretch and Gomez set
her down to go after Switch, who had taken over from Always a Princess in
midstretch. Miss Match just got her head in front on the line to finish up in
1:47 1/5 over the fast dirt.

“She had placed herself well and was traveling really good,” Gomez explained.
“(Rafael) Bejarano (on Vision in Gold) and (Joe Talamo on St Trinians) both kind
of snuck up on either side of me trying to move up and have those other horses
ahead of us in dead aim. I didn’t feel like I could do that with her and
continue with a run. I just sat there and let them all make a run. I knew she
would stay, I just didn’t know if I could get her accelerated enough to pick her
back up.

“She wasn’t traveling all that great in the middle of the turn. I just kept
waiting on her to give her a chance to reestablish the way she was training and
start traveling better.

“When I first got to the quarter-pole I asked her to pick it up and she did a
little bit at a time. As I moved her out and decided to move back in, it was
like a whole new horse just jumped right in the bridle. She had this win
attitude where she knew what she wanted and she went after it. She came home
very well for us.”

Sent off the 45-1 second longest shot in the field, Miss Match paid $92.40,
$14.60 and $6. Switch, the 4-5 favorite, was a half-length in front of Vision in
Gold (Medaglia d’Oro), with St Trinians (GB) (Piccolo) and Hemera (Maria’s Mon)
completing the order under the wire. Party With Brando (Bertrando) was
scratched.

“We had a good trip. She just got a little tired in the lane,” said Joel
Rosario aboard Switch. “I’m not disappointed. She gave me everything she had.
She came back good and that’s the main thing.”

Miss Match earned her first victory stateside when taking an allowance last
out in her seasonal bow, and adds the Santa Margarita to a resume that now reads
20-6-2-6, $551,614. Third in the Winter Melody S. and Wayward Lass S. last year,
the six-year-old mare captured the Gran Premio Seleccion (Arg-G1), ran second in
the Premio Franciso J. Beazley (Arg-G2) and finished third in the Gran Premio
Copa de Plata (Arg-G1) and Premio General Luis Maria Campos (Arg-G2), all in
2008.

“We were just hoping that they’d go fast enough up front and she would come
running,” trainer Neil Drysdale said. “That’s her style, so we weren’t going to
change her style of racing. It played out well apart from that poor filly
(Always a Princess) getting injured.”

Miss Match sold for $500,000 as last year’s Keeneland November sale, and is
out of Miss Simpatia (Southern Halo). That one is herself a daughter of Group 3
winner Miss Peggy (Arg) (Fitzcarraldo), making her a full sister to 2000
Argentinean Horse of the Year Miss Linda (Arg), who captured the 2001 Spinster
S. (G1) while also placing in the Apple Blossom H. (G1) and Personal Ensign H.
(G1) in the United States. Miss Simpatia is also a full sibling to 2004
Argentinean champion miler Mr. Nancho (Arg).