8/23/12
Last updated: 8/22/12 6:57 PM
Rivalries continue in King’s Bishop; Contested cuts back
for Test
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Currency Swap is a perfect three-for-three at Saratoga heading in to the King’s Bishop
(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography) |
All but one of the Grade 2 Amsterdam runners, as well as Trinniberg and Fort
Loudon, will renew their individual rivalries on Saturday in the Grade 1,
$500,000
King’s Bishop Stakes at Saratoga.
The main-track affair drew 10 sophomores sprinting seven furlongs, and will
be joined on the Grade 1 Travers undercard by 10 three-year-old fillies going
the same distance in the Grade 1, $500,000
Test
and nine distaffers in the Grade 2, $250,000
Ballston Spa at 1 1/16 miles on the inner grass.
As for the King’s Bishop, the race will feature six of the seven runners from
the 6 1/2-furlong Amsterdam on July 29. Currency Swap recorded the 1 3/4-length
win that day over Doctor Chit, who in turn had a neck to spare on Unbridled’s
Note. It was just another neck back to Laurie’s Rocket, who was followed by
fellow King’s Bishop contenders Fort Loudon and Gun Boat. Politicallycorrect ran
last in the race and his connections have decided to bypass Saturday’s event.
The Amsterdam was supposed to be Fort Loudon’s affirmation of his neck
victory over Trinniberg in the Grade 3 Carry Back at Calder on July 7, but
instead the Awesome of Course colt found himself finishing fifth, 3 3/4 lengths
behind the winner. Trained by Stanley Gold through the Carry Back, Fort Loudon
was transferred to Nick Zito following that race to prepare for a Saratoga
campaign. He’ll get a jockey switch to Junior Alvarado on Saturday.
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Owner Shivananda Parhboo said Trinniberg was meant to run in
the Amsterdam but wound up in the Carry Back to help his hometown track,
Calder, fill a race that only drew five participants. He said his colt
wasn’t primed for the race in which Fort
Loudon nailed him on the line.
“For him not to be ready and to run a race
like that, it was amazing for that,” he said. “We were totally not prepared
for the Carry Back, but now there is no excuse. He is 100 percent ready.”
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It was nip/tuck between Fort Loudon and Trinniberg (yellow bridle)
on the Carry Back wire
(Coady Photography) |
Trinniberg hasn’t competed since the Carry Back, and will be looking to
return to the form that saw him score in the Grade 3 Swale, Grade 3 Bay Shore
and Grade 2 Woody Stephens, all going the King’s Bishop distance of seven
furlongs. In fact, the Teuflesberg dark bay has suffered just one loss at the
distance, with that coming when he ran second to Currency Swap in last year’s
Grade 2 Hopeful at the Spa. Regular rider Willie Martinez has the call on the
Bisnath Parboo trainee.
Ever So Lucky didn’t compete in either the Amsterdam or Carry Back, as
trainer Jonathan Sheppard gave the Indian Charlie three-year-old a near
three-month break following a series of setbacks while on the Triple Crown
trail. He was scratched from the Grade 2 Hutcheson following a less-than-stellar
breeze and missing a workout due to a bruised left hind foot in mid-February.
Third in the Grade 3 Swale in his three-year-old debut, he was never a factor in
Grade 1 Blue Grass, finishing 17 1/4 lengths behind Dullahan over the Polytrack
at Keeneland.
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Ever So Lucky returned to the races on July 5 at Delaware Park and recorded
an easy 7 1/2-length victory in a one-mile allowance, then ran third behind
Travers contenders Street Life and Five Sixteen in the Curlin Stakes on July 27
while going 1 1/8 miles on the sloppy, sealed track. Jockey John Velazquez was
aboard that day and retains the mount on Saturday.
There are two newcomers in the King’s Bishop, led by the Rick Dutrow-trained
Willy Beamin, who captured the seven-furlong Mike Lee Stakes by
four lengths against state-bred rivals on June 25. The bay gelding captured Wednesday’s 1 1/8-mile Albany Stakes at Saratoga
by 6 1/4 lengths, and Dutrow told
the Daily Racing Form on Monday a good performance in that contest would
see the Suave sophomore run back in the Travers.
Willy Beamin wasn’t entered in the Travers, but could return in the King’s
Bishop on just a couple days rest. That move paid off in the Mike Lee when
Dutrow entered his pupil off a 2 1/4-length optional claiming victory just four
days prior.
“As long as he comes back all right and
Rick (Dutrow) says ‘Let’s do it’, then we’ll do it. It’s all up to Rick,”
said Willy Beamin’s owner, James Riccio. “The
Travers came up pretty tough, not that the King’s Bishop isn’t (tough). At least
we have won at seven-eighths. We’ll cut back, and maybe we’ll get lucky.
“When we
get the numbers tomorrow or the next day, we’ll see how confident we are. If he
ran the right number today, I would say I will be confident he’ll show up. I’m
not going to say we’re going to win, but he’ll show up. To be here on Saturday
will be a great day. For a $25,000 claimer, why not?”
Spin Out is the other newcomer, and will actually be making his stakes bow in
the King’s Bishop. The chestnut son of Hard Spun will be saddled by Zito off a
pair of placings against optional claiming/allowance company in New York and
retains the services of Rosie Napravnik.
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Contested romped in the Acorn prior to her subpar effort in the Mother Goose
(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography) |
One race earlier on Saratoga’s Saturday program, Contested will try to get
back to her winning ways in the Test. The Ghostzapper filly broke her maiden at
Santa Anita last October then went on a three-race win streak that included the
Grade 3 Eight Belles and Grade 1 Acorn. Trainer Bob Baffert then stretched his
charge out past a mile for the first time in the Grade 1 Mother Goose last out,
and Contested faded to last of five, beaten 14 3/4 lengths, after setting the
early pace.
“I think the track had a lot to with (Contested’s
poor performance in the Mother Goose),” assistant trainer Jim Barnes said. “It had rained heavily the night before. It was a different track
the day we ran in the Acorn. It was very fast that day. The day we ran in
the Mother Goose it was deep, and I don’t think you wanted to be on the
inside.”
Contested returned to California following the
Mother Goose, turning in five workouts at Del Mar, and arrived at Saratoga
on Monday.
“She’s training well and the weather should be good throughout the
weekend, so I expect her to (rebound in the Test),” Barnes added.
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The bay filly gets a jockey change to
Rafael Bejarano for the race while taking on Aubby K and Amie’s Dini.
Aubby K ran third in the Acorn before stretching out herself in the Grade 2
Delaware Oaks going 1 1/16 miles on July 14. The Street Sense miss round up
fourth that day, just a neck behind third-place finisher Amie’s Dini on the
wire. Aubby K could improve here as her two career wins have come at sprint
distances. The Ralph Nicks filly broke her maiden at Belmont Park last September
by 15 1/2 lengths while going 5 1/2 furlongs and then two races later captured a
6 1/2-furlong optional claimer at Gulfstream Park by 9 3/4 lengths.
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Amie’s Dini is looking for her first win since taking the Martha Washington in February
(Oaklawn Park/Coady Photography) |
Amie’s Dini has proven quite versatile when it comes to distance. The Bandini
sophomore has finished off-the-board only once in her nine-race career, with
that coming as an eighth-place run in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks. She closed out
her juvenile campaign with a 6 3/4-length triumph at Churchill Downs while going
six furlongs, then ran second in the six-furlong Dixie Belle and captured the
one-mile Martha Washington to open her sophomore season.
The Ron Moquett pupil stretched out to be runner-up in both the Grade 3
Honeybee and Grade 2 Fantasy prior to her Kentucky Oaks effort and was given a
brief vacation before returning in the Delaware Oaks.
Other contenders in the Test include stakes debuter Book Review, who earned a
103 BRIS Speed rating for her 2 1/2-length triumph against Saratoga allowance
rivals on July 20 following a runner-up effort behind eventual Grade 1 Alabama
winner Questing in a June 24 optional claimer; Beautiful But Blue, easy winner of the Fleet Indian and Bouwerie Stakes going the Test distance against state-bred rivals; and Jazzy
Idea, fourth in the Grade 1 Prioress three weeks ago sprinting six furlongs.
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“She’s really the last filly that’s even been
within earshot of (Questing) at the finish line, so that gives me some
confidence for sure,” said Book Review’s trainer, Chad Brown. “Questing is
an awfully nice horse. I thought Book Review ran well when she ran second to
her. I’m looking forward to running her and seeing if she can step up to
that level. She’s doing very well.”
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Zagora scored in the Diana last year at Saratoga
(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography) |
Saturday’s stakes action will get underway in the Ballston Spa, which
features a stellar line-up of turf fillies and mares and one main-track only
entrant in Acting Happy. The top draws in the race are Zagora, Tapitsfly, Hungry
Island and Summer Soiree, three of whom are returning off runs in the Grade 1
Diana on July 28.
Zagora was the defending champion of the Diana, but could only manage a
third-placing this time around. The daughter of Green Tune
entered that race off nice wins in the Gallorette Handicap, Hillsborough and
Endeavour, all Grade 3s, with a fifth-placing in the Grade 1 Jenny Wiley thrown
in for good measure. The chestnut mare will keep Ramon Dominguez in the irons.
“In hindsight, she probably did need the race,” admitted the mare’s trainer,
Chad Brown. “Especially on softer turf, it was a little more demanding of a race
off the (two-month) layoff. She got a lot out of it, and she’s put a couple of
really nice works in since.”
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Tapitsfly was third in the Jenny Wiley and would go on to take the Grade 1
Just a Game prior to a fading fourth in the Diana after setting the early pace.
The Dale Romans mare was second in this race last year and will be looking to
improve one spot this time around under Javier Castellano.
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Tapitsfly is looking to go one better in this year’s Ballston Spa
(NYRA/David Alcosser) |
“Firmer ground is
definitely what she wants,” Romans asserted. “She came out of the Diana
really well. I wasn’t thinking about running her back that quick, but she’s
just doing so well up here. There’s plenty of speed in there with her and
Summer Soiree, so we’ll see what happens.”
Hungry Island ran in last for much of the Diana before putting in a mild
rally to take fifth in the six-distaffer race. The More Than Ready four-year-old
did much better when rallying for third in the Just a Game, and got to the wire
first in the Grade 2 Churchill Distaff Turf Mile on Kentucky Oaks Day.
“I was little disappointed
in her race in the Diana,” Hall of Fame trainer Shug
McGaughey said. “(Jockey John Velazquez) said when he asked her, she was just
even. Who knows? That’s really the first time she’s ever done something like
that, but she has trained good since and hopefully we can get her back on
the right track.”
Velazquez will stay aboard Hungry Island.
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Summer Soiree will be making her seasonal bow in this spot, having last been
seen running a half-length second in the Grade 1 Matriarch at Hollywood Park in
late November. Julien Leparoux has the call aboard the Graham Motion
four-year-old.
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