Reddam Racing’s Bond Holder rallied to catch Dance With Fate and drew away to
a 2 1/4-length victory in Saturday’s Grade 1, $250,000
FrontRunner
at Santa Anita, earning his first win in his fifth career start.
Mario Gutierrez rode the Doug O’Neill-trained son of Mineshaft who is now headed
to the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile.
Can the Man broke on top but Test Ride sprinted forward from his outside post
and showed the way into the first turn, completing the opening quarter-mile in
:22 2/5 on a short lead. Can the Man advanced forward to put pressure on the
pacesetter entering the backstretch and was only a head back after a half-mile
in :46 3/5, with Dance With Fate and Ontology also up close stalking the early
action.
Bond Holder angled toward the inside from post 9 after the break and raced
toward the back of the 10-horse field. He came out entering the far turn and
began picking off rivals, reaching third by the top of the stretch.
Can the Man surged to the lead on the far turn, completing six furlongs in
1:11 3/5 with a one-length edge, but gave way to Dance With Fate entering the
stretch drive. Bond Holder was also rapidly advancing into contention on the far
outside.
Dance With Fate reached the mile mark in 1:38 1/5 with a half-length
advantage, but proved no match for his fast-closing rival as Bond Holder powered
by late.
“This race set up great for my horse because he likes to come from behind,”
Gutierrez said. “He seemed to like the distance today and I think that played a
major part in his win.”
Bond Holder completed 1 1/16 miles in 1:45 and paid $23.80 to win as the 10-1
sixth choice in the wagering.
Dance With Fate, the 2-1 favorite, held second by two lengths over Tamarando,
who broke slowly and came flying late to be third as the 7-2 third choice. It
was another three parts of a length to 2-1 second choice Can the Man, who was
followed under the wire by Flat Gone, Test Ride, Better Bet, Ontology, Even Echo
and Roundupthelute. Schoolofhardrocks was scratched.
Out of the multiple stakes-winning mare Cielo Girl, a daughter of
Conquistador Cielo, Bond Holder sold initially for $90,000 as a 2012 Keeneland
September yearling before bringing $125,000 at the OBS March two-year-old sale.
The bay colt finished fifth when making his career debut in the July 13
Hollywood Juvenile Championship and followed it with a pair of thirds against
maiden special weight rivals at Del Mar. Bond Holder stretched out to two turns
for the first time on August 31, closing late for second behind the
well-regarded New Year’s Day in a one-mile maiden special weight event on
Polytrack.
He’s now earned $186,000 from a 5-1-1-2 mark.
“We thought this horse would improve on dirt and with distance,” J. Paul
Reddam said.
“I don’t think the dirt made much of a difference because he runs everywhere;
it was the distance that was the biggest factor,” Gutierrez added.
Reddam has enjoyed success in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, winning with the
Jeremy Noseda-trained Wilko in 2004. He’s also finished twice with He’s Had
Enough (2012) and Square Eddie (2008), and third with Great Hunter (2006), all
trained by O’Neill. And O’Neill captured the 2005 edition with champion
two-year-old Stevie Wonderboy.
“We had great expectations for this horse even though he was a maiden,”
assistant trainer Leandro Mora said. “He ran a huge race at Del Mar (in his last
start) and we knew we had a legitimate horse.
“Mario (Gutierrez) has ridden the horse every time but we told him just to
let the horse alone and let him do his thing the last quarter of a mile. That’s
the way this horse likes to run; the last quarter of a mile.”
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