Dialed In lived up to his strong early reviews and entered the starting gate
So it should be no surprise that there was a tinge of deja vu in the air
With two wins in the Kentucky Derby to his credit, Zito’s mind never wanders
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“He was doing really well and we were looking for a shorter race, but the
mile race came up and we decided to go in there,” Zito said. “He ran a really
good race and the fact that he won at a mile kind of puts us ahead of where we
might have been with him.”
Casual Trick has a pedigree that suggests the Kentucky Derby could be right
down the bay ridgling’s alley. He’s by 2006 Preakness winner Bernardini
out of Casual Look, a Red Ransom mare who took the 2003 renewal of Britain’s
Group 1 Epsom Oaks for breeder William S. Farish. Casual Look’s victory for the
master of Kentucky’s Lane’s End Farm in the 1 1/2-mile race for three-year-old
fillies came during Farish’s service in London as U.S. Ambassador.
“Bernardini is one of the hottest sires out there, and being out of one of
Mr. Farish’s mares, you know there’s quality there,” Zito said. “We like to
bring our horses to Churchill Downs in the fall and it’s worked well for us.
Dialed In is a good example of why we like to come here.”
Dialed In’s November 12 debut last year was the only race of his two-year-old
season. He launched his three-year-old campaign with a stretch-running victory
in the January 11 Grade 3 Holy Bull at Gulfstream Park, and later won the Grade
1 Florida Derby over that track. The son of Mineshaft went to the sidelines with
an injury after a fourth-place finish to behind Shackleford and Animal Kingdom
in the Preakness.
Zito said Casual Trick would probably have a racing timetable similar to his
campaign with Dialed In, with a first outing against winners likely sometime in
January at Gulfstream.
Another Kentucky Derby hope for Zito could emerge in Saturday’s Grade 2
Kentucky Jockey Club, the co-feature on the Stars of Tomorrow II program devoted
exclusively to two-year-olds. He plans to saddle Tracy Farmer’s homebred Saint
Honore in the 1 1/16-mile Kentucky Jockey Club.
A son of Farmer’s Sun King, who finished 15th to Giacomo as one of five Zito-trained
runners in the 2005 Kentucky Derby, Saint Honore rallied to score a narrow
maiden victory on October 10 at Belmont Park. Saint Honore’s win came at the
Kentucky Jockey Club distance in the third start of his young career.