Breeders’ Cup Classic
winner Mucho Macho Man made a cameo appearance during live racing at Santa Anita
Sunday, working five furlongs in 1:01 2/5 between the 4TH and 5TH races in
preparation for Saturday’s Grade 1 Santa Anita Handicap.
With regular exercise rider Nick Petro aboard, the strapping son of Macho Uno
warmed up going the “wrong” way, turned around in the vicinity of the finish
line, and eased into a gallop in the right direction.
Mucho Macho Man broke off in earnest at the half-mile pole, and with
ground-devouring strides, reeled off splits of :24 1/5 and :48 4/5 on the good
track. The Kathy Ritvo charge continued to motor along, ears pricked, down the
lane and motored past the wire to the seven-furlong marker.
This was the second time that “MMM” had visited the Santa Anita track on
Sunday. At 8 a.m. (PST), the six-year-old had gone out under Petro for a
“wrong-way” jog and appeared to relish the conditions.
Mucho Macho Man brings a three-race winning streak into the Big ‘Cap, for
which he rates as the 124-pound highweight and projected morning-line favorite.
A 4 1/4-length romper in the September 28 Awesome Again here, he just held on
from Will Take Charge in the November 2 Breeders’ Cup Classic, and opened 2014
with a 14-length demolition job in the January 18 Florida Sunshine Millions
Classic.
Hall of Famer Gary Stevens, who has been aboard for those past three
victories, again has the call on Saturday.
Meanwhile, archrival Will Take Charge took to the track at Oaklawn Park
Sunday morning and zipped a half-mile in a bullet :47 4/5. The champion
three-year-old male of 2013 posted the best of 74 works at the distance on the
fast track.
Since missing by a nostril to Mucho Macho Man in the Breeders’ Cup Classic,
the D. Wayne Lukas trainee captured the November 29 Clark Handicap at Churchill
Downs and finished second to track record-setter Lea in the February 9 Donn
Handicap at Gulfstream Park. Plans call for Will Take Charge to ship Monday to
California.
As an added twist to the Mucho Macho Man/Will Take Charge rivalry, the Hall
of Fame tandem of Stevens and Lukas are on opposing teams.
Stevens and Lukas have a storied and successful relationship, numbering two
Kentucky Derby victories among their scores of prestigious triumphs through more
than three decades, and it was Lukas who gave Stevens a leg up on Oxbow to win
last year’s Preakness Stakes and validate in no uncertain terms Stevens’
comeback at age 50 after a seven-year retirement.
“As much elation as we felt after we beat Will Take Charge a nose in the
Breeders’ Cup Classic last year, it was hard for Wayne to get beat like that,” Stevens said at Clockers’ Corner on a cloud-covered Sunday morning on which the
main track was open after being closed for three days due to rain.
“Still, Wayne was classy after the loss. He was waiting for me in the tunnel
when I came back and gave me a big old hug. It was pretty cool. The Big ‘Cap is
a helluva horse race and he’s got a helluva horse, but I’ve got a helluva horse,
too, and I don’t want to get beat.
“I don’t even want to think about the other side of it. I’m focused on the
positive of what I’m expecting and what can be accomplished this year. This is
just the second leg of a big plan that Mucho Macho Man’s team had.”
If all goes
well, Mucho Macho Man and Will Take Charge would meet again in the Breeders’ Cup
Classic at Santa Anita on November 1.
Stevens turns 51 on Thursday. Lukas is 78. Despite naysayers considering each
past his prime, the two Hall of Fame members seemingly have discovered the
Fountain of Youth.
“To me, Wayne was never gone,” Stevens said. “A lot of people had him over the
hill, but now he’s got another good three-year-old (Unstoppable Colby, who runs in
Saturday’s Grade 2 San Felipe Stakes) and Will Take Charge. That shows what he can do when he’s got the goods.
“In a way, that’s my situation, too. I’ve been able to show what I can do if
I’ve got the goods, and I’ve got plenty of goods right now, and I’ve had plenty
of goods, touch wood.”
Bet Horseracing Free Online at TwinSpires.com