November 30, 2024

Emma’s Encore upsets Victory Ride at 39-1

Last updated: 7/7/12 7:37 PM











Emma’s Encore was unstoppable in the Victory Ride

(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)

Trainer Allen Jerkens lived up to his nickname of the “Giant Killer” on
Saturday when saddling Emma’s Encore to a 2 3/4-length victory in the Grade 3,
$150,000

Victory Ride Stakes
at Belmont Park. Campaigned by Brenda Mercer and Peter
A. Berglar, the Congrats filly was sent off the 39-1 longest shot against her
five rivals, finishing six furlongs on the fast dirt in 1:08 4/5 to pay $80, $26 and $61.

“I saw her break (on the television monitor),” Jerkens said, “and then I
couldn’t find her because I didn’t have the energy to walk out here. I finally
made it. I thought I was going to pull a Walter Brennan. Remember that movie
(‘Kentucky’ released in 1938)? He died when he got to the winner’s circle.

“(Agave Kiss) just went so fast. It’s not speed favoring today, is it? A
couple of times this meet, for some reason, jockeys go head and head and I don’t
know what it is. It’s so nice to be back and win one.”

Jockey Junior Alvarado allowed Emma’s Encore to settle in the rear of the
field as 1-5 favorite Agave Kiss and Jamaican Smoke battled it out on the front
end through blistering splits of :21 2/5 and :44. The unbeaten Agave Kiss showed
signs of trouble entering the turn and quickly fell back in the lane as Jamaican
Smoke took command with Tu Endie Wei keeping in close attendance.



Emma’s Encore was running well off the rail and angled to the center of the
track down the stretch, powering past Jamaican Smoke and Tu Endie Wei to earn
her first stakes victory.










An 83-year-old Allen Jerkens celebrated Emma’s Encore win in the Victory Ride with rider Junior Alvarado

(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)

“I was being optimistic when I picked this race,” Jerkens admitted. “We’ll
probably think about the (Grade 1) Prioress (at Saratoga on August 4). We’ve had
a little luck in the (Grade 1) Test Stakes (on August 25 at Saratoga), too. It’s
so nice to win one. We hadn’t been doing any good at all lately, so this really
helps a lot.”

“I was so confident in the filly,” Alvarado stated. “(Chief) said ‘There’s
going to be a lot of speed in the race.’ She broke really good, really sharp and
got herself comfortable. By the five-sixteenths pole, she started to pick it up
and I said to myself, ‘Wow, they’re going to have to be running today for her to
get beat’ because she picked it up right away and gave me a nice, good kick.”

Jamaican Smoke got her neck in front of Tu Endie Wei on the wire to take
second, and it was another 7 1/2 lengths back to Sea Island. Agave Kiss was two
lengths behind in fifth, while Gypsy Robin completed the field in last.

“We made the lead but got pressed a lot harder than I wanted, but turning for
home she just seemed like she wasn’t herself today,” said Ramon Dominguez, who
had piloting duties aboard Agave Kiss. “She was pretty energetic, even galloping
out, but I’m sure the fractions weren’t helpful at all.”

Emma’s Encore was routed in her only prior stakes attempt, finishing a
well-beaten last of eight in the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks in late March.
That 1 1/8-mile contest was the dark bay filly’s only try past seven furlongs,
and Jerkens cut her back to seven-eighths for her next start, an optional
claimer at Belmont Park. The sophomore lass did better while reverting in
distance to be second in that May 16 event, and, by conquering the Victory Ride,
improved her career mark to 9-3-1-1, $162,958.



“(Owner Brenda Mercer) sent her to me, I never knew the lady before, and then
after she won she sold a half interest to Mr. Berger. I guess he’s pretty happy
now, too. I know I am,” Jerkens explained. “It’s amazing, because I didn’t have
anything else and the lady sent me this filly and she turns out to be good.

“She worked very well, and she’d been doing well, and (my assistant Fernando
Abreu has) been working real hard with her. She’s a little bit off behind, and
we have to keep trying to keep her sound and feeling good. She got shut off a
lot of times at Gulfstream and still ran by them at the end. She showed class
that day and then we made a mistake and ran her in that mile-and-an-eighth race
(Gulfstream Park Oaks). It looked like this was a mistake, too, till now.”

Bred in Florida by Equest Thoroughbreds, Emma’s Encore was a bargain $2,000
Keeneland September yearling purchase. She is the first stakes winner out of the
Wild Again mare French Opera, who is a full sister to Group 3 victress Wild
Emotions, and counts as her third dam the stakes-winning King’s Bishop mare La
Reine Rouge. That one is best known as the granddam of ill-fated 2006 Kentucky
Derby star Barbaro.

Others of note in this female family include multiple Grade 2 veteran During,
Grade 3-scoring sire Green Alligator, Grade 1-placed multiple stakes heroine
Lucky Lavender Gal and Barbaro’s dam, dual Grade 2-placed La Ville Rouge.




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