5/7/11
Last updated: 5/6/11 5:48 PM
Victoria’s Wildcat makes winning stakes debut in Eight
Belles
|
Victoria’s Wildcat roared under the Twin Spires
(Jamie Newell/Horsephotos.com) |
Bob and Victoria Bayer & Jonathan Metcalf’s VICTORIA’S WILDCAT
(Bellamy Road) entered Friday’s $118,800
Eight Belles S. (G3) at Churchill Downs off back-to-back allowance
wins, but was trying stakes company for the first time in the
seven-furlong test.
The Bob Hess Jr. trainee passed her black-type test with flying
colors, rallying down the outside to overtake dueling leaders Home Sweet
Aspen (Candy Ride [Arg]) and Honey Chile (Invisible Ink) before drawing
off to score by 2 1/4 lengths on the wire. With jockey Kent Desormeaux
aboard, the dark bay miss stopped the clock in 1:23 and returned $15.20,
$6.20 and $4.40 as the 6-1 fifth choice.
“This is what we always thought we had, and it has finally all came
together,” Hess said. “She bruised her foot in January. We thought she
hurt herself, but it was just a bruise and an abscess. We lost some time
in January with her. She’s going to be a neat filly the rest of the year
and next year. She’s very healthy. We’ll sit down and talk about what’s
next — maybe something in New York or here.”
“This is like a case of brotherly love. (Trainer) Bob (Hess) has been
putting me on horses since 1990. It sure is good to win one for him,”
Desormeaux said. “The first 100 yards out of the gate I got hazed. She
was having trouble switching her leads and she fell back behind them.
But she got it going and in the end it unfolded just like I’d hoped.
“It helps when you’ve got the horse to do it. It’s like going for
that hole and having the hole go faster than you. Today we were fast
enough to get right on through.”
Home Sweet Aspen set the opening half-mile in splits of :22 and :44
2/5, with Honey Chile keeping in close attendance. That Grade 2-placed
filly challenged on the turn, getting her head in front of Home Sweet
Aspen through three-quarters in 1:09 4/5, but by that point Desormeaux
had pushed the button on Victoria’s Wildcat. The sophomore flew past the
battling duo, and Home Sweet Aspen just managed to get her nose down
first on the line to take second over Honey Chile.
|
“She ran well, but I was pushed all the way,” said Joel Rosario, who was
aboard Home Sweet Aspen. “That pressure outside is not the best for a horse. The
winner just came by us fastest. There’s nothing you can do about that.”
Angelica Zapata (Sharp Humor), Holiday Flare (Harlan’s Holiday), Pomeroy’s
Pistol (Pomeroy), Formal Plan (Formal Gold), 5-2 favorite Arienza (Giant’s
Causeway), Dr. Diamonds Prize (Pure Prize) and Mysterious Chimes (Aldebaran)
completed the order under the wire.
|
Victoria’s Wildcat flew by the early leaders
(Neville Hopwood/Horsephotos.com) |
“He (jockey Ramon Dominguez) felt like she didn’t handle the race
track, but I don’t know. That’s kind of a lame excuse, I think. I don’t
know,” trainer Dan Peitz said of beaten favorite Arienza. “I’m going to
get back there and see how she is. I’ll know more tomorrow probably
about where we’re at. Hopefully, she will be good.”
Victoria’s Wildcat opened her career in California last fall, running
fourth in a pair of Del Mar maidens on the synthetic Polytrack, and
filled that same spot when transferring to Keeneland’s version of that
track. Hess shipped her to Churchill Downs and ran her on the dirt there
next out, and the dark bay lass just missed by a neck. She closed out
her juvenile season with a two-length victory against allowance rivals
in late November, and made just one start this year prior to Friday’s
race, posting a nose score in another allowance on March 19.
The
winner’s share of the Eight Belles boosted the sophomore’s lifetime
earnings to $151,571, and she now owns a 7-3-1-0 career mark.
Bred in Kentucky by Marvin Little Jr., Victoria’s Wildcat sold to the
Bayer’s as a $20,000 Keeneland September yearling. She is out of the
unraced Flaming Mirage (Woodman), who produced last year’s
Dubai Golden Shaheen (UAE-G1) hero Kinsale King (Yankee Victor).
Victoria’s Wildcat also has a pair of younger half-siblings in the
unraced juvenile colt Gambling Don (Forest Danger) and a 2011 filly by
Sky Mesa.
|
Flaming Mirage is herself out of Grade 2-placed stakes winner Flaming Leaves
(Olden Times), making her a half-sister to Grade 3-placed multiple stakes hero
Light of Morn (Alleged) and dual Grade 2-placed stakes scorer Dancing Mirage
(Alleged). Others of note in this line include 1982 champion Roving Boy (Olden
Times) as well as multiple Grade 3 winners Now Listen (Miswaki) and Sandtrap
(Irish River [Fr]).