December 22, 2024

Vyjack battles back to win Jerome

Last updated: 1/5/13 5:17 PM


Pick Six Racing’s Vyjack displayed plenty of heart in Saturday’s Grade 2,
$200,000
Jerome
at Aqueduct, re-rallying to the lead in deep stretch to post a head
decision. The three-year-old gelding, who was making his graded and two-turn
debut over the inner track, thrust himself into the Kentucky Derby picture and
remained unbeaten in his third career start for trainer Rudy Rodriguez.

Vyjack completed a mile and 70 yards in 1:40 3/5 with jockey Cornelio
Velasquez.

“He’s still learning and hopefully he keeps learning. He was very game,”
Rodriguez said of the narrow win. “He shows us in the morning he’s that way. I
really don’t want to see him on the lead because he’ll kind of want to wait for
horses. Hopefully this race will wake him up a little bit and put him more in
the game because he’s got a lot of talent.”

Mudflats sprinted to the lead after the gates opened, but Vyjack hustled
forward from his inside post and was up close in second along the rail as the
field entered into the first turn. The opening quarter-mile was completed in :24
and as the field made its way into the backstretch, Vyjack advanced to seize
command, passing the half-mile point in :47 2/5 with a one-length lead.

Vyjack continued to show the way through the far turn, but he drifted out a
little approaching the top of the stretch, allowing 41-1 longshot Siete de Oros
to surge into contention along the inside. That rival struck a head in front
while passing the six-furlong mark in 1:12 and continued on a short lead through
the majority of the stretch drive, but Vyjack grimly battled back in the latter
stages to thwart the upset bid.

“My horse, I think, is a good horse, but he’s a little green,” Velasquez
explained. “He doesn’t pay too much attention during the race. He tried to get
out, and at the quarter pole the other horse came inside. He passed me and my
horse changed leads, but I had a lot of horse.

“My horse tried to get out, fought a little bit, changed leads, and came back
again.”

The winner paid $4.30, $3.30 and $2.90 as the even-money favorite among eight
rivals. Vyjack won his career debut, a 6 1/2-furlong maiden special weight, by 1
3/4 lengths on November 10 and captured the seven-furlong Traskwood Stakes by 5
3/4 lengths on December 9, both performances coming on Aqueduct’s main track.
He’s now earned $202,200.

Siete de Oros finished three lengths clear of 39-1 outsider Amerigo Vespucci,
who edged fourth-placer and 5-2 second choice Long River by a half-length. Vegas
No Show came next under the wire and was followed by Notacatbutallama, Mudflats
and James Jingle.

“The owner and I already discussed this; now we’ll just back off a little bit
and wait for the (Grade 3) Gotham (on March 2 at Aqueduct),” Rodriguez said when
asked about Vyjack’s next start. “Hopefully, he’ll show up again.”

A son of first-crop sire Into Mischief, Vyjack is out of the unraced
Stravinsky mare Life Happened, a half-sister to multiple Grade 3 winner Disco
Rico and the dam of Prime Cut, who placed in the Grade 2 Peter Pan and the Grade
3 Lexington in 2011. This is also the female family of champion sprinter Smoke
Glacken. Bred in Kentucky by Machmer Hall, Vyjack initially sold as a yearling
for $45,000 at the 2011 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky July Sale before bringing a
winning bid of $100,000 from his current connections at Fasig-Tipton Maryland
May Two-Year-Old Sale last year.



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