January 15, 2025

Weekend Hideaway hoping to continue NY-breds run in Grade 1 Spa sprints

Last updated: 8/28/14 7:30 PM


Weekend Hideaway hoping to continue NY-breds run in Grade 1
Spa sprints










Weekend Hideaway has easily handled state-bred rivals in his past two

(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)

Two New York-breds, Palace and Artemis Agrotera, have won
Grade 1 sprint races so far during the 2014
Saratoga meet. On Saturday, Weekend
Hideaway will attempt to join that group when he competes in the Grade 1,
$500,000 Forego, a seven-furlong race for three-year-olds and up at the Spa.

The chestnut son of Speightstown is a four-time
stakes winner and enters the Forego off a two-length triumph in the 6 1/2-furlong
John Morrissey for New York-breds just two weeks ago on August 15 at Saratoga.
The Red and Black Stable colorbearer is trained by Phil Serpe, who also trained for and advised
Weekend Hideaway’s late breeder, Carl Lizza of Flying Zee Stables.

Serpe credited Lizza for being at the forefront of the
movement to improve the quality of New York-breds.

“When Mr. Lizza passed away, I bought (Weekend Hideaway for
$40,000) for Red and Black Stable out of the dispersal,” the horseman
explained. “At that
time, Flying Zee Stable was one of the first operations to go really in advance
on breeding better mares to out-of-state sires and coming up with better New
York-breds.

“As you can see from this horse and (Artemis Agrotera) and horse after horse
that New York-breds are something to be reckoned with now. Just like (Zivo), who came back and won the Suburban
(Handicap). You have to
respect horses for what they are and not where they are bred.”

Weekend Hideaway is 3-1-0 in four starts on the main track
at Saratoga, where he broke his maiden and won the David Stakes as a two-year-old.
He has made only one start in a graded contest, finishing fifth in the 2013
Hutcheson at Gulfstream Park.

“We’re definitely moving up in class,” Serpe said. “I
thought he ran a really sensational race (in the Morrissey), and we have to see
how good we are.”

Serpe said he expects Weekend Hideaway to relish the
Forego’s seven-furlong distance.

“I think this horse’s best distance is six to seven furlongs,” Serpe stated. “We were trying to stretch things to a mile
(when he was
third in the Commentator Handicap in May) at
Belmont, and I don’t think that is
his cup of tea. Against the right horses on the right day he could go farther
than seven furlongs, but I’m not really looking to do that.”










Vyjack is seeking a return to his early form

(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)

Grade 2 victor Vyjack should also relish the Forego’s seven-furlong distance;
the four-year-old is two-for-two at seven-eighths while winning the 2012 Traskwood at
Aqueduct in his
second career start as well as an optional claimer on April 27 at the
Big A in his seasonal debut.

“We’re taking a chance, and hopefully the seven furlongs
will help him,” trainer Rudy Rodriguez said. “It’s a very tough field. It’s not
going to be easy. Let’s see what happens.”

In his most recent effort, the four-year-old Into Mischief gelding was fourth, beaten five
lengths by Palace, in the six-furlong Alfred G. Vanderbilt Handicap on
August 2 at the Spa after breaking awkwardly and spotting the field an early
advantage.

“We were kind of disappointed with the way he broke last
time,” Rodriguez said. “He ran a pretty good race that day. If he had broke with
the group, I don’t think he could have beaten the winner but we could have been
a little closer, maybe second or third. Since then he’s been training very, very
good.”

Despite the result, Rodriguez was pleased to see a renewed
interest by Vyjack, who was a well-beaten ninth in the Metropolitan
Handicap and eased in the Suburban Handicap in his other two 2014
outings.

“We were very happy to see him perform and finish the way
he did,” Rodriguez said. “It was encouraging to us to see that he still wanted
to do it. He ran a very good race and he came back good out of the race. He’s
training very good. I take him every day to the main track and I school him in
the paddock. I do what I can, and now it’s up to him.”

Vyjack won his first four starts, including the Jerome and Gotham to open his 2013 campaign. On the Triple Crown trail,
he was third by a length in the Wood Memorial, 18th in the Kentucky
Derby, eighth in the Belmont Stakes and sixth in the Haskell
Invitational before getting an extended vacation.

“Sometimes, you have to give them an easy race to get them
back into the rhythm again,” Rodriguez said. “Sometimes, you keep putting horses
in the Grade 1 races and they finish third, fourth, fifth and I think they just
go through the same routine. They know when they win; they know when they do
something good. Sometimes you have to show them that they can still be
competitive and then they get a little better.”

Rodriguez is hoping for a better start in the Forego for
Vyjack, who will break from post 3 in the 10-horse field under jockey Irad
Ortiz Jr.

“I don’t want to look for excuses,” Rodriguez said.
“Believe me, he’s worked good and he’s trained good. He’s doing very good, and
he looks very good. You’ve just got to hope that he breaks good. I think if he
breaks with the group he’s got a good chance.”




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