The Bernard Baruch was the only race to remain on the turf on a soggy day at
Breaking from the outside with regular rider Robby Albarado, the
But Silver Max responded, and after clocking 1:11 for six furlongs, he kicked
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“It’s no secret what his strategy is: he just pops right out of there and
goes right to the front,” Albarado said. “I try to be a quiet and patient
passenger on him and let him do all the work.
“They came to me a little earlier than I anticipated, at about the half-mile
pole. But he’s just got such a high cruising speed and he holds it. Today, I
just let him run from the first pole on, and he really stretched the race out.
He held off a couple nice horses. He gets on his streaks, and I think his last
couple (of races) he’s been back to himself.”
“We needed that,” trainer Dale Romans said.
“They made him work a lot more today than I thought he would. If you had told
me he was going to go that fast for the first (half-mile), I’d say he’d be 15
(lengths) in front. They made him run for it.”
Romans was asked about the turf condition.
“Every time something happens, you’re concerned, especially going into a big
race like this,” the trainer said. “If there’s anything to worry about, you will
worry about it. But he handled it last year in Virginia (when winning the
Virginia Derby at Colonial Downs).”
Paris Vegas’ connections were pleased with his performance.
“Turning for home, I thought we had a shot,” jockey Rosie Napravnik said. “My
horse is a kind of a grinder. You know he doesn’t have a huge kick, but he ran
very well.”
“He ran great,” trainer Tom Voss said of Paris Vegas. “He wouldn’t change to
his right lead in the stretch for whatever reason. I don’t know why. Maybe he
was a little uncomfortable.”
There was a gap of 6 1/4 lengths back to Tetradrachm in third. Turallure, the
3-1 second choice, never landed a blow from off the pace and settled for fourth.
So Long George lagged in last for the duration.
Next came a convincing 5 1/2-length triumph in Keeneland’s
Silver Max’s skein ended in the Secretariat at Arlington, as he gave way in
His 2013 campaign likewise began with a pair of subpar efforts — a fifth in
Silver Max regained his old sparkle in the off-the-turf Opening Verse back at
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“Last year, I might have overdone it with him,” Romans observed. “I ran him a
lot of times in those three-year-old races. He was a little tired at the end of
the year. He’s coming into the summer and fall a lot more fresh, and I think by
the end of the year he could be one of the best turf horses around.”
Bred in Kentucky by Steve Snowden, Seth Lauffer and Will Lauffer, Silver Max
was a $20,000 Fasig-Tipton July yearling. Produced by the Kissin Kris mare
Kissin Rene, he is half-brother to stakes winner True Kiss. This is the extended
family of Grade 1 winner and sire Yes It’s True as well as Canadian champion and
Grade 2 winner Kiss a Native.
Silver Max is inbred 4×4 to influential sire Roberto.
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