INTERNATIONALS IN THE
BREEDERS’ CUP
NOVEMBER 1, 2012
Breeders’ Cup Friday
European invaders have found Santa Anita a happy hunting ground
in Breeders’ Cups past, and for the 29th edition, the international presence is
further bolstered by representatives from South America and Japan.
Here’s the scouting report on the raiding party set for Friday,
with another feature to follow on Saturday’s foreign hopes.
Juvenile Sprint
CEILING KITTY — Tom Dascombe filly doesn’t fit the profile of
Shumoos, an English shipper who was a terrific second in last year’s inaugural
Juvenile Sprint in her dirt debut. While Shumoos had the pedigree to move up on
dirt, and strong form at six furlongs, Ceiling Kitty’s pedigree is heavily
tilted toward turf, and she looks better at five furlongs. At that shorter trip,
she just missed equaling a juvenile course record in her 20-1 upset of the Queen
Mary at Royal Ascot, and she finished fourth versus males in the Flying Childers
at Doncaster. The Flying Childers form looks solid, with the winner Sir
Prancealot having previously chased the unbeaten duo of Reckless Abandon and
Dawn Approach, and the runner-up being two-time Group 3 victor Bungle
Inthejungle. But Ceiling Kitty didn’t fare as well when stepping up to six
furlongs in the Cheveley Park last out, where she wound up seventh. Note also
that her co-owner is Betfair founder Andrew Black, who gave away a half-interest
in the filly as part of a betting competition (which is why her other co-owners
are listed as the Master Bettors). This placement might have more to do with a
nice day out for the partners in the backyard of Betfair affiliate TVG than a
serious win proposition, but it’s hard to discount exotics chances in such a
short field.
Marathon
FAME AND GLORY — A curious conclusion to an otherwise honorable
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SENSE OF PURPOSE — Onetime Melbourne Cup hopeful is another
whose season hasn’t lived up to its promise. The Dermot Weld trainee was at the
top of her game in 2011, rating as Ireland’s highweight older mare from 11 to 14
furlongs, but has been disappointing in two of three starts this year. Yet she
has had excuses, ranging from desperately bad ground, to massive weight, and
last time, an equipment change to a tongue tie that (theoretically) might have
backfired. Considering that she’s a small mare, carrying imposts of up to 138
pounds — versus males no less — must be crushing. Sense of Purpose now gets in
with a feathery 123, and that alone could help her. In her best effort of 2012,
she was a close fourth in the Lenebane at Roscommon, form that ties in very well
with the Irish St Leger and with her stablemate Galileo’s Choice, who runs in
Monday night’s Melbourne Cup. Three-fourths of her pedigree makes her a dubious
quantity on dirt, but her female line has plenty of American ancestry, and this
1 3/4-mile trip is ideal for her. Post 13 did her no favors, but she has shown a
good deal of tactical speed in the past.
ALMUDENA — Peruvian champion mare tackles this distance for the
first time, but is a real grinder who has been staying on dourly at the end of
her 1 1/2-mile races. She has also shown the ability to take her game on the
road to Argentina, most recently placing in a pair of Group 1 events there.
Almudena looked stronger in her third to the classy male Al Qasr in the Gran
Premio 25 de Mayo, a Challenge race for the Breeders’ Cup Turf, than she did in
her prior two races on dirt, where she was outpaced. Indeed, after scoring a
Peruvian classic victory on dirt in 2010, Almudena threw in a few subpar efforts
on the surface, but turned things around when switched to turf. If she gets into
a comfortable rhythm, she keeps going relentlessly. Whether she’ll be able to
find that comfort zone in a U.S. dirt race is another question. She was run off
her feet in the Gran Premio Latinoamericano, albeit in a much faster pace
scenario than what’s on tap here. Unlike the true dirt aficionado Calidoscopio,
Almudena shapes up as perhaps better on the turf, but her never-say-die attitude
is a real plus.
Juvenile Fillies Turf
FLOTILLA — Better-than-appears fourth in the Marcel Boussac
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INFANTA BRANCA — O’Brien filly was unfortunately relegated to
the also-eligible list, but is far better than her 15-1 morning-line odds imply.
A sharp prospect very early in the season, she defeated one of Jim Bolger’s
tough colts, Leitir Mor, to become the first winner for her freshman sire
Henrythenavigator. Leitir Mor has progressed over a busy campaign, and just
finished second to his presumptive champion stablemate Dawn Approach in the
Dewhurst. Infanta Branca was next third to another useful colt, Cay Verde, as
the favorite in the Marble Hill. Cay Verde, subsequently the beaten favorite in
the Norfolk at Royal Ascot, has since won a French Group 3 and placed in a pair
of Group 2s. Infanta Branca looked like a filly to follow over the summer, but
she was sidelined for 4 1/2 months. She just returned with an encouraging fourth
to stablemate Lines of Battle (who runs in Saturday’s Juvenile Turf) in the
seven-furlong Star Appeal over Dundalk’s Polytrack. With that tightener under
her belt, Infanta Branca is entitled to improve substantially here, for she is
bred to prosper at a mile on firm turf. The half-sister to Lil’s Lad, the 1997
Champagne runner-up and 1998 Fountain of Youth winner, only needs to draw into
the field.
WATERWAY RUN — American-bred daughter of Arch is bred to
improve with age and distance, and it’s a positive sign that she’s already
progressed in a short time. The rate of her advancement can be neatly measured
through her rival Light Up My Life. In a two-year-old handicap (called a
nursery) in August, Waterway Run was only fourth behind Light Up My Life, who
set a new juvenile course record for seven furlongs over Newmarket’s July
Course. But last time out in the Oh So Sharp Stakes, Waterway Run finished with
a flourish to catch her by a half-length. Waterway Run has plenty of early speed
— she wired a nursery at York two starts back, and traveled very smoothly while
stalking the pace in the Oh So Sharp. While a strict reading of the collateral
form suggests that she’s a fair bit behind Sky Lantern, it’s not easy to get a
firm fix on a moving target like Waterway Run. Her trainer Ralph Beckett won the
inaugural Marathon with Muhannak here in 2008, and she picks up the services of
the newly freelance Frankie Dettori.
THE GOLD CHEONGSAM — The daughter of Red Clubs has the same
sire as Sky Lantern, but that’s about as close as she can come to the favorite.
Like Waterway Run, The Gold Cheongsam has come up through the nursery scene, but
unlike that opponent, she has yet to break through at the Group level. Shrewdly
spotted by trainer Jeremy Noseda, she plundered the lucrative Weatherbys
Insurance versus males, but principally by means of a 15-pound weight concession
from the runner-up. The Gold Cheongsam was put in her place when last of 11 in
the Cheveley Park, but to be fair, she didn’t have a clean trip. She turned in a
more characteristic effort when third in the Tattersalls Millions, but that
sales race — restricted to certain Tattersalls graduates — is not comparable
to this type of test.
Filly & Mare Turf
I’M A DREAMER — David Simcock trainee might be overlooked
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NAHRAIN — Last year’s Filly & Mare Turf runner-up will probably
appreciate the fact that this renewal is a furlong shorter, with Santa Anita’s
configuration permitting 1 1/4 miles as opposed to the 1 3/8 miles at Churchill
Downs. Trainer Roger Varian deliberately took it easy with her in the first half
of this season, preferring to have her peak at this time, and he has timed it
just right. After two poor efforts over the summer, Nahrain turned the corner
with an encouraging third in the Blandford, and regained the winning thread with
a spearing late thrust in the Flower Bowl. On the negative side of the ledger,
however, the daughter of Selkirk might have thrived better than her Filly & Mare
Turf rivals Zagora and I’m a Dreamer in the yielding conditions. She also
appeared to hang, until Dream Peace ranged up on her outside, and she responded
to the stimulus. Johnny Velazquez recommended blinkers, which will be added to
Nahrain’s equipment for the first time. Will that have the desired effect, or
will the headgear cause a different set of issues, especially in a paceless
race?
RIDASIYNA — On paper, the Aga Khan homebred has outstanding
credentials, thanks to her emphatic 3 1/2-length defeat of Izzi Top in the Prix
de l’Opera last time out. Yet there’s a nagging suspicion that Ridasiyna
exploited a particular set of circumstances that won’t be repeated here. Izzi
Top stalked the taxing tempo, drove to the lead prematurely, and was a sitting
duck in the heavy ground. The more patiently-ridden Ridasiyna stayed on strongly
in the conditions, not so much with a dazzling turn of foot, as simply slogging
more powerfully through the Longchamp mud. It should also be noted that she had
an equipment change that day, sporting headgear for the first time, in hopes of
calming her fragile nerves that had cost her dearly in her only loss.
Immediately following the Opera, trainer Mikel Delzangles was not inclined to
try the Breeders’ Cup: “She is not a filly with which you would want to travel
so far.”
UP — O’Brien filly is probably better than her sixth-place
effort in the Beverly D., where she adopted pace-forcing tactics that don’t work
to her benefit. The hardy three-year-old has run 10 times this season, most of
them reasonably good performances. Arguably her finest two came after she got
home from Chicago, when she posted back-to-back wins in the Lanwades Stud
Fillies Stakes and Blandford at the Curragh, beating a still-rounding-into-form
Nahrain in the latter. Up’s progress appeared to be stymied with a sixth in the
Sun Chariot at Newmarket last out, but that might not be the case. She was
dropping back markedly in trip to a mile, in a race that could have simply given
her something to do before the Breeders’ Cup. The pattern is somewhat
reminiscent of O’Brien’s smart filly last year, Together, who wheeled back in
the Sun Chariot, flopped, but came back with a bang at Keeneland. Note too that
Up has already crashed the Breeders’ Cup exotics — in the 2011 Juvenile Fillies
Turf, she got up for fourth at odds of 21-1.
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